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iPod Lawsuit Lawyers Sue Their Own Plaintiff?

Guinnessy writes "Jason Tomczak, who is mentioned as the lead to the iPod Nano 'Scratch' Class Action law suit filed against Apple computers has published an open letter to the mac community. In it he claims that he never asked to be represented by David P. Meyer & Associates or Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro, the lawyers in the case. He spoke to them once by phone about his scratched iPod case and asked that his name not be used. In fact, the two firms agree there is no signed document proving that Tomczak asked for representation. However, because Tomczak wants nothing to do with the case, David P. Meyer & Associates or Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro are currently suing him to try and stop him from pulling out. They also say Tomczak is legally liable for their fees if they lose the court case against Apple. Needless to say Tomczak isn't happy with the arrangement, and is likely to still lose thousands of dollars under the best scenario."

4 of 424 comments (clear)

  1. Steve Berman... by Starxxon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Steve Berman from Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro was one of the lawyers handling the nano suit. He's one of Microsoft's favorite lawyer, having defending MS in more than 50 class-action suits made by the states and consumers.

    Let's say that the following is completely speculative and happens in fantasy-land. (I don't wan't to get sued!)

    One day in autumn 2005, Bill Gates is playing golf with his lawyer friend Steve Berman.

    -Steve: Did you see the new iPod nano?

    -Bill: Yeah yeah I did...nice little player but you know my position about iPods... We had big plans with the RIAA to impose WMA as the audio standard, by this year we were supposed to drop Red-Book audio from all CD sold in the US, replacing the content with DRMed WMA. You can imagine how the iPod and iTMS screws up our plans badly.

    -Steve: I guess many big-players are pissed-off by the iPod success.

    -Bill: Yes they are, but the iPod seems unstoppable... Even with dozens of our ghost-writers publishing negative articles about the iPod, it keeps dominating the market.

    -Steve: I've read that the iPod nano scratches very easily, and that some of the early batches had screens that spontaneously break.

    -Bill: I know about it, our ghost-writers are already trying to spread the word... but we need something bigger, we don't have a choice.

    -Steve: There's a guy that built a website to complain about his iPod nano screen problems and he's very vocal about it.

    -Bill: What if your law firm gave him a hand to help him build a class-action suit against Apple?

    -Steve: Yeah we could do that, but what if he doesn't want to be part of the lawsuit?

    -Bill: I'm %100 sure your great firm will be able to "convince" him... And by the way, you owe me that, remember that "thing" I sent you last month?

    -Steve: Oh right, that "thing" was very enjoyable... I guess I owe you that one...Let me see what I can do!

  2. Anyone else asked the lawyers for clarification? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I read his letter yesterday and thought t might be worth writing about. I emailed every contact address I could find on the sites of both law companies, unfortunately I haven't gotten a reply.

    info@dmlaws.com
    rcarey@hbsslaw.com
    steve@hbsslaw.com
    info@hbsslaw.com
    mark@firmani.com

    Unfortunately none of them has responded so I can't clarify the truth of the allegations. Perhaps some other people should email them asking for clarification as well.

  3. Re:next up by phoenix.bam! · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The filed a lawsuit using his name as the lead defendent.
    They would not remove his name from the lawsuit even though they had no proof he wanted to be involved and he explicity stated he want to NOT be involved.

    They did not comply so he was forced to file a lawsuit to clear his name. Instead of settling, the offending lawfirm counter-sued using Anti-Slapp laws. Now the guy will be in for a boatload of money because some scum bag lawfirm decided to use a few quotes of his from a blog and his name inappropriately for a class action lawsuit.

    The headline says they are suing him because that is the news. This guy should be suing the lawfirm, but them suing him? Now that's news.

  4. Re:It's not about making the case by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    They want to keep him tied up in legal proceedings until the Apple case has been resolved, and they're using a number of dirty tricks to do so.

    I don't know. Seems like he'd make an ideal witness for Apple. He's provably not biased toward them (the whole episode started because he had a problem with their products), yet clearly doesn't want this to procede.

    To be honest, I think Apple should make peace with him by introducing him to the happy side of their legal department. Shysters against little guy? No problem. Shysters against Apple's legal unit? Not so easy. It'd be relatively cheap for Apple and great PR.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?