We are delighted to announce that effective January 1, 2008, we have two new partners. Phil Harley has returned to the Firm after practicing elsewhere for the last five years, and will resume his position as one of the leaders of our case trial efforts. The Firm’s name has changed to reflect his return. Jim Oberman, who was an associate and then Counsel to the Firm since 1998, has also become a partner. Jim is a Certified Appellate Specialist and will head up our appellate and legal research and writing efforts. Reach their biographies by clicking on their names above. The addition of Phil and Jim to the partnership further enhances our ability to provide the very best possible representation for asbestos victims and their families, which continues to be our focus and our mission. Please contact us if we can be of any assistance or if you have any questions about these changes. Steven Kazan
October 30, 2007
Dear Colleagues and Friends,
We are writing to inform you that after 15 years of working together on behalf of the best clients any firm could have, Simona Farrise has decided the time has come for her to establish her own firm, to be called The Farrise Law Firm, with offices in Santa Barbara, Oakland, and San Francisco, so that she can expand the scope of her practice to areas outside the Firm's focus on asbestos cancer litigation.
Although this means that her formal ties and associations with the Firm have ended, we all are excited for her in her new practice. Given our longstanding mutual respect for each other, we look forward to collaborating on cases of mutual interest in the future.
We welcome your questions, and invite you to contact the Firm or Ms. Farrise at the addresses listed below.
Sincerely,
Steven Kazan
Kazan, McClain, Abrams, Lyons & Greenwood
A Professional Law Corporation
171 12th Street
Oakland, CA 94607
(510) 465-7728
www.kazanlaw.com
Simona Farrise
The Farrise Law Firm
1-800-748-6186
www.farriselaw.com
farriselaw@cox.net
3905 State Street
Suite 7-505
Santa Barbara, CA 93105
Pier 9 Law Offices
The Embarcadero
San Francisco, CA 94111-1497
1330 Broadway
Suite 1701
Oakland, CA 94612
I wrote before that one of our areas of interest is the international effort to ban the use of asbestos. It is ironic that much of the rest of the world is far ahead of the United States in this effort. My partners and I, through our Foundation, have been major supporters of the organized global efforts to ban asbestos. Over the years, I think it fair to say that we have been the single largest financial supporter of the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat, whose mission is stated in its very title. IBAS has helped organize and coordinate many meetings around the world devoted to asbestos awareness, education, and efforts to outlaw future use of asbestos. We came to realize that much of these materials produced at these international meetings was disappearing. Often, the meetings are small and not terribly well funded, and whatever informational materials they produced were not widely distributed beyond actual attendees. Nor were they generally available online.
I am very pleased to announce that we have found a way to solve that problem. We are sponsoring a new web site, now up and running, called www.WorldAsbestosReport.org. It is just that – a place we are making available for anyone hosting or organizing meetings related to asbestos use, asbestos disease, and efforts to solve the problems of such use, so that they can post calendar information about these meetings to a worldwide audience, and then post the actual program materials for all to see. We are inaugurating this web site with two landmark contributions.
IBAS and others organized the Global Asbestos Conference as an ongoing institution. The first conference was held in Brazil in 2000 and the second was held in Tokyo in 2004. The proceedings of both conferences were prepared and published on CD-ROM. These materials include not only the traditional forms of medical and scientific papers, but photographs, video clips, multimedia presentations, and a whole host of fascinating information. My firm contributed the funds needed to produce and distribute these annals on CD, and we have now posted them in their entirety on www.WorldAsbestosReport.org with most portions available in both .html and .pdf formats, and all fully searchable. Please drop by and visit it and let me know if you have any comments or suggestions.
-Steven Kazan.
The Boston Herald published an article the other day about a local asbestos case involving a woman who died tragically of mesothelioma some years ago. The paper went on to quote some experts from around the country, and two of the comments struck me as particularly relevant. One person noted that mesothelioma is "a disease that has been ignored for decades." I found that a bit curious because at least at my office, mesothelioma has been our primary focus for over 30 years. It is true that much remains to be done, but it’s also true that the people who did the most to ignore asbestos disease and mesothelioma are the leaders of American industry who have known since the 1930s that asbestos was causing cancer, who were seeing cases of mesothelioma by the 1940s and 1950s, and who knew by 1960 without question that mesothelioma was a signal disease of asbestos exposure. The Herald went on to say that "in the past year, attorney competition for patients suffering from mesothelioma has heated up . . . ."
There is no doubt that lawyers are competing for new business, but this is not an asbestos phenomenon. Lawyers in all fields compete for new clients just as all businesses seek new customers. If you want to see enough lawyer ads to last a lifetime, just type mesothelioma into your favorite search engine and see what happens, or turn on cable TV late at night, or pick up any magazine devoted to veterans or other heavily exposed groups. But relying on these advertising efforts to select an attorney is a big mistake. There are reasonable ways to make such selection and appropriate questions to ask. There are lawyer web sites that read like the National Enquirer or other tabloids; there are lawyer web sites masquerading as non-profit informational public service resources; there are lawyer web sites that trace readers and make unsolicited "cold calls" to people who visit their sites, trying to sign them up as clients. I think that’s a shame, and I don’t do it.
I started our web site in 1998 because I lost a client to just such efforts. A gentleman who lived about 80 miles away from our office was given my name by his neighbor, whose case I had handled. Just as we were getting started, his daughter went online and found a lawyer on the East Coast who had a large web presence. That lawyer signed them up and then transferred the case to another lawyer in California, who seemed to lose interest after the gentleman passed away. Thereafter, the family came back to me, rather sheepishly, and asked if I would please take over the case. I did, but it taught me a great lesson. I learned that there were people out there who thought that a web site was more "real" than an office a short drive away with 100 people working very hard in 27,000 square feet of a real office building. I rapidly concluded that if there were people who thought that a web site was more real than an office building, I had better build a web site. So we did.
But I think what we do is too important and our clients’ problems are too serious to trivialize them, or publicize their personal business. So, we decided that our web site would serve primarily as an information resource for people, helping them to understand what asbestos is, what asbestos does, and what can be done to manage both medical and legal consequences. It seems like we got it right – The Lancet, one of the world’s most prestigious medical journals, published a survey article about asbestos information resources and recognized our web site as one of the best out there. We have won other awards and recognition, but nothing is as satisfying as a family member contacting us to thank us for providing all the information they needed to understand what had happened to a loved one, even when they don't ask for our assistance.
Steven Kazan.
-Steven Kazan.