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The Improbable Verdict

How One Person Beat the Cheats and Got Justice for His Clients

Barry Brandt

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Paperback

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English
Barry Brandt
27 October 2022
A poorly trained, seventy-five-year-old driver illegally parked his big-rig tractor-trailer on the side of the highway. On a pitch black November morning, a family SUV slammed into and under the rear of the parked truck. The father/driver and one son, sitting behind him, were killed on impact. Two other young children exited through a rear window.

The mother was trapped in the front passenger seat, and a fire began under the hood of the car. The two surviving children alternately tried to extricate their mother and tried to flag down passing vehicles. Their mother was slowly incinerated as she called her son to help her.

The defendant trucking company refused to pay the paltry One Million Dollar policy, forcing a trial. Attorney Brian Brandt took on the case.

Brandt went to trial, representing Kylie, the nine-year-old sole survivor, as well as the interests of Blaine, the other original survivor. The jury awarded One-Hundred-Forty Million Dollars, plus interest and costs. It was and remains the largest wrongful-death verdict amount in the history of California. The case was not over, however, as the trial judge made a stunning decision, leaving much more to be told.

By:  
Imprint:   Barry Brandt
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 12mm
Weight:   222g
ISBN:   9780578348452
ISBN 10:   0578348454
Pages:   220
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Barry Brandt has been an attorney for more than fifty years. The transition from trial attorney to author is seamless, as every case has a story with a beginning, a middle, and an end. He takes pride in being the origin in a family of lawyers, including his son, Brian, the protagonist inthis book and his other son, the late Brendan Brandt, former senior partner with the thirty-attorney firm Varner and Brandt. His oldest grandson, Conor, has passed the Washington State Bar, and several granddaughters are contemplating law school.Brandt's letter to the State Bar of California urging that court appearances on minor, calendaring matters be allowed by telephone resulted in that change many years ago, saving clients millions of dollars in unnecessary fees. That change allowed the courts to function during the pandemic.

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