Wednesday, August 11, 1999
Asbestos firms' trial postponed
Attorneys still deposing potential witnesses in case
BY STEVE KEMME
The Cincinnati Enquirer
HAMILTON The first trial of 31/2-year-old lawsuits filed by more than 800 current and former employees of AK Steel against asbestos manufacturers has been postponed for at least several weeks.
The trial was scheduled to start Aug. 18 in a Butler County Common Pleas courtroom of the new Government Services Center in Hamilton. It would have been the first court proceeding in the building, which isn't expected to open until the fall.
Attorneys in the case still have to interview potential witnesses in deposition hearings. That could push the trial into September, said visiting Judge Harry Hannah, a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas judge who has been assigned to the case.
AK Steel is not named as a defendant because there was no evidence company officials knew about the dangers of asbestos before the federal government outlawed its use in 1972.
Before then, American steel plants used asbestos extensively primarily as insulation and binding material.
This first trial involves a lawsuit filed by the family of Ronald Robinson, a former AK Steel employee who died last year at age 49 of mesothelioma, a cancer that attacks the lung's lining.
Mr. Robinson of Middletown worked for AK Steel, formerly known as Armco, from 1967 until he became ill several years ago.
He died from a disease that is caused only by asbestos exposure, said Steve Wolens, an attorney for the plaintiffs. It's horribly painful. It winds up almost suffocating a person by squeezing the lungs.
All of the 865 current and former AK Steel employees involved in the lawsuits contracted diseases related to asbestos, their attorneys say. Fifty-five of them have died since the lawsuits were filed, Mr. Wolens said.
Of the 40 asbestos manufacturers named in the lawsuits, about 30 remain in the case. Some settled with plaintiffs and others were dropped from the case because the plaintiff argued they did not contribute to the employees' illnesses.
The lawsuits contend that the asbestos manufacturers knew about the potential health dangers of their products as early as the 1930s and failed to warn anyone.
The manufacturers dispute that allegation.
The Robinson trial could face further delays. When visiting Judge George Elliott handled this case, he filed an order questioning how the plaintiffs prepared their witnesses for the case and instructing the jury to be informed about this issue.
The plaintiffs appealed the order with the 12th District Court of Appeals.
The plaintiffs will decide early next week if they will proceed with the appeal. If the plaintiffs don't drop the appeal, the case might not come to trial for six to eight months, Judge Hannah said.
Police review: Carpenter shooting justified
Bell, airport lead campaign against new area code
Driver hits 4, speeds away
CPS lowers bar on grades for activity participation
City busing cut hits small schools
Labor could throw support to Springer
Send us your ideas on tax surplus
Who gets Bengals seats in the taxpayers' suite?
5/3 won't pursue mistaken deposits
Desperate blood bank reaches out to public
Hot spell put chill on camping
Parched Ohio a disaster area
Principal resigns under cloud
Schools want students back on time
Catching up with the Class of '69
FBI joins search for rapist
Inmate sues to get abortion
Johnny Bench sued over golf clubs
Seniors' public housing inspected
GET TO IT
Little of Lilith should be missed
New help for knees
Asbestos firms' trial postponed
Board moves toward fall levy vote
City eases rules on housing
Coast Guard, sun clear gas from Ohio
Computer's child porn not local, police say
Dad's release goal of papers, defendant says
Debt would go, but so might control if water system sold
dispatch centers open talks on merger
Health priorities developed
Jury in child's death split on some charges
Middletown/Monroe schools seek levy renewal
Mo-ped driver injured in crash
Schools ask state board to OK split
Small piece of new highway to open
Sweet rewards for buckling up
Taste of Colerain celebrates 10th year
TRISTATE DIGEST