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26 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
America needs to read this book, January 18, 2003
There's an old Latin maxim that asks, "Who watches the watchmen?" I just finished _The Rule of Lawyers_ and Olson should be thanked for piecing together more than a mere series of judicial outrages. Olson shows how trial lawyers have syphoned billions of dollars into their own pockets while manipulating legislatures and judges in order to shield themselves from accountability. This is nothing short of an assault on the Constitution. Every American who cares about the future of the country (please forgive the purple prose, but I'm serious here) needs to read this book.
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22 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
good read, June 15, 2003
By A Customer
I have worked for the plaintiffs' class action bar since I got out of law school a few years ago. I like to visit Mr. Olson's website overlawyered.com, where the firm that I work for is routinely slagged. Anyway, I finally got around to reading The Rule of Lawyers, and I thought it was pretty good. I certainly can't question the main premise, that the Master Settlement Agreement with the tobacco industry a few years ago generated massive cash for the plaintiffs' class action bar that has been plowed back into new class actions aimed at (1) enriching counsel for the proposed class(es) and (2) promoting some kind of social agenda. As Mr. Olson discusses in his book, class litigation is mostly a kind of cozy shell game where a specialized group of lawyers on both sides broker settlements with each other, at the cost of insurers and their customers, although recently the verdicts are getting to be the size of the GNPs of some countries (like the Philip Morris case in Illinois), and I think it's probably not a good idea for trial lawyers to have that kind of power.Mr. Olson obviously has legal training and mostly gets the law right. I think the main flaw in his premise is just that it's not really reasonable or fair to expect the plaintiffs' bar to be better than the society they operate in. Sure they are crazed with greed and self-aggrandizing fantasies, but so are a lot of people. My point is, they are really a symptom of the society more than anything else. The real solution is to try to encourage the public to develop a better understanding of what the law is supposed to do. I don't think ad hoc legislative interventions like the Class Action Fairness Act are the answer. I worked for a district court and I can tell you that reports about overcrowded federal dockets are very true. Unless people like Mr. Olson want to shell out extra taxes to appoint new federal judges and support staff, the likely result of the CAFA is just going to be to bring the work of the federal courts to a total halt (and I'm not exaggerating, it's well-documented how enactment of the Reconstruction Era civil rights statutes drowned the federal courts in lawsuits for decades). Actually, this is the reason that the Federal Judicial Conference and Chief Justice Rehnquist support the outright abolition of diversity jurisdiction--it's too much of a burden on the limited resources of the federal courts. Anyway, to conclude, I thought the book was pretty good. The class action device probably does have a role to play in our law (hey, it's been around for centuries), but currently things have gotten very much out of hand (that's trite, but it's late). I tend to think that federalizing class actions is not the answer. The resolution of the problem of the entrepreneurial plaintiffs' bar probably can't come until there is some serious effort made to try to interest the public in our democratic institutions.
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21 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Hidden Gem, April 12, 2003
As a former (and now retired) business lawyer in California, I have observed the antics (and, yes, the anti-social tendencies) of the class action trial lawyers over the years with a great deal of embarrassment and chagrin, and have wondered how and when they would be reined in. That day is still a ways off, unfortunately, for the reasons Mr. Olson relates in his book.Mr. Olson "tells it like it is," citing a mountain of well-researched facts and anecdotes, and he builds his case with the reader relentlessly. The author demolishes the myths that the trial lawyers' bar would have us believe, and explains why the system is out of control. Concludes he, "Year upon year we do nothing to govern our elite litigators, and the result at length is that they have decided to govern us." The ultimate victims are the taxpayers and the integrity of the legislative and judicial system. This book should be required reading of every legislator and judge, both federal and state, as well as by every well-informed American, whether of conservative, liberal, moderate or agnostic bent. I rarely write book reviews for posting on www.Amazon.com, but this book was extraordinarily good.
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