Filing lawsuits doesn’t immunize Gori vs asbestos fraud claims: New filing

Filing lawsuits doesn’t immunize Gori vs asbestos fraud claims: New filing

Spread the love

Saying “human tragedy is no license for fraud,” a plastic pipes maker is urging a federal judge to reject the bid to end their racketeering lawsuit accusing the Gori Law Firm, America’s most prolific filer of asbestos personal injury lawsuits, of allegedly running an illegal “bounty” system that pushed false asbestos injury claims and allegedly coached plaintiffs and witnesses to lie.

“The fact that a plaintiff has contracted mesothelioma does not mean the Gori Firm is allowed to invent a fact pattern and teach a witness to lie in order to extract settlements from chosen target companies,” the pipes manufacturer, J-M Manufacturing, said in their filing.

“Teaching another person to lie, extracting a payment from a third party based on the telling of that lie, and splitting the proceeds recovered — that is criminal. A license to practice law should never allow anyone to commit criminal acts.”

The May 21 filing came as the latest step in a court fight over the fate of the action lodged by Los Angeles-based J-M accusing Gori of filing hundreds of allegedly bogus claims against the company and violating the federal Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).

J-M filed the motion in response to Gori’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit.

In the response brief, J-M asserts Gori is essentially asserting their work of filing lawsuits should insulate them from the fraud and racketeering claims.

J-M claims Gori has advanced a “staggering claim … that a years-long campaign of criminal fraud is not cognizable merely because it occurred in the context of litigation.”

“Contrary to Defendants’ suggestion, fraud does not magically transform into non-fraud when a lawyer employs it in a money-making litigation scheme,” J-M wrote in its new brief. “This Court cannot allow Defendants to invent a ‘litigation immunity’ to pardon their criminal enterprise.

“Lawyers are not above the law. Fraud committed by lawyers is still fraud.”

J-M had filed suit against Gori in Southern Illinois federal district court in late January.

J-M and Gori have faced off in court, with Gori on the plaintiffs’ side of the docket, hundreds of times. According to court documents, Gori has named J-M as a defendant in its asbestos lawsuits at least 400 times.

All told, J-M has been targeted more than 6,000 times in asbestos-related lawsuits, with most of those lawsuits lodged in Madison and St. Clair county courts, the top two destinations for such lawsuits in the U.S.

However, according to J-M’s complaint, about 96% of the cases brought by the Gori firm were ultimately dismissed.

And the reason, J-M asserts, is because at least hundreds of those lawsuit claims against J-M were based on a long-running fraud scheme.

In its filings, J-M notes that accusations of fraud are nothing new in asbestos litigation, as evidenced by other cases in which plaintiffs’ firms have been caught double-dipping ­— using litigation delay tactics to improperly collect from both asbestos lawsuits and later claims filed against bankrupt companies — or filing fraudulent claims altogether. These included famous cases that generated headlines in asbestos litigation involving CSX and Garlock Sealing Techs.

In the new complaint, J-M claims a lawyer who formerly worked at the Gori firm has provided evidence that Gori allegedly engaged in similar patterns of fraud, but allegedly took the alleged scheme to new levels.

In its complaint, J-M accuses the Gori firm of establishing a so-called “bounty” system under which it incentivized the lawyers it used to conduct depositions of clients – so-called “depo attorneys” – to coax and coach clients into agreeing to level false asbestos exposure claims against J-M and other companies, even when the client had never been exposed to products made by those companies.

According to the complaint, the Gori firm had used that bounty system since at least 2018.

Under the alleged system, attorneys “who successfully coached their clients to provide deposition testimony that they were exposed to products belonging to (J-M and certain other companies)” could secure “up to 2% of total settlement proceeds.”

This could allegedly allow an attorney earning as little as $65,000 a year the chance to bring in “up to $800,000 or $900,000” more in earnings per year, the complaint alleges.

According to the complaint, the alleged “bounty list” included J-M and at least 19 other companies, allegedly including 3M, Caterpillar and Honeywell, among others.

According to the complaint, companies allegedly landed on Gori’s “bounty list” because they were seen as “easy targets who were willing to pay substantial settlements” or were companies that had “‘pissed off’ Gori attorneys” in prior proceedings.

According to the complaint, this alleged strategy of tacking on dozens of potential additional defendants — allegedly whether or not they were based on factual claims — allowed Gori to maximize its returns using a so-called “batch settlement” scheme.

The lawsuit against Gori marks the second time J-M has lodged such fraud and racketeering claims against a top asbestos lawsuit firm.

In 2024, J-M also sued Alton-based Simmons Hanly Conroy, accusing America’s second largest filer of asbestos-related lawsuits of falsifying or suppressing evidence in asbestos cases and coaching witnesses to allegedly lie under oath about exposure to asbestos from cement pipes J-M produced.

That case remains pending, as the Simmons firm seeks to also dismiss that action.

In Gori’s motion to toss the lawsuit against them, the firm follows a similar path laid out by their Simmons counterparts. Gori asserted the court must end J-M’s action, because it fails the so-called Noerr-Pennington test. That legal doctrine, established under a U.S. Supreme Court decision, essentially affirms Americans have a constitutional right to file lawsuits and defend themselves in court.

In its motion, Gori says J-M’s lawsuit can’t survive under the so-called “sham litigation” exception to that doctrine, which doesn’t extend such constitutional protections to obviously fake legal claims.

And Gori asserts J-M can’t present any evidence to back its “bounty” claims, asserting the lawsuit was motivated by sour grapes and a desire to strike back somehow at the Gori firm for allegedly repeatedly resting big money settlements and judgments from J-M on behalf of people who claimed they were harmed by asbestos allegedly contained in pipes made by J-M.

“J-M’s Complaint is littered with conclusory allegations of fraud and hyperbolic allegations about a ‘bounty system’ and ‘fraud playbook,’ but J-M never identifies any specific misrepresentations in furtherance of a scheme to defraud, as it must,” Gori wrote in its motion to dismiss, filed in late April.

But in its response, J-M said its claims are strong, and asserted Gori is improperly attempting to use the Noerr-Pennington doctrine as a shield to neutralize attempts to hold them accountable under the law for alleged fraud.

“Defendants’ Motion asks this Court to hold that lawyers, by virtue of their membership in the bar, have RICO immunity for professional fraud,” J-M wrote. “Nothing in Defendants’ motion merits such a drastic ruling. Defendants cannot claim immunity as a matter of law.”

Gori has not yet responded to J-M’s response in court.

U.S. District Judge Stephen McGlynn has not yet ruled on the motion to dismiss.

Gori has been represented in the case by attorneys Ryan J. Mahoney, of The Mahoney Law Firm, of Glen Carbon, and Neal K. Katyal, of Milbank LLP, of Washington, D.C.

J-M is represented by attorneys Ashwin J. Ram and Andrew Erskine, of the firm of Buchalter LLP, of Los Angeles and Chicago, and J-M General Counsel Frank Fletcher, of Los Angeles.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois quick hits: Edgar funeral details released; O'Hare measles exposure warning

Illinois quick hits: Edgar funeral details released; O’Hare measles exposure warning

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Edgar funeral details released Funeral services have been announced for former Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar. The public can pay last respects...
Beecher Fire Protection District graphic.2

Beecher Fire District Board Approves 2025-2026 Budget

Article Summary: The Beecher Fire Protection District Board of Trustees unanimously approved its budget and appropriations ordinance for the upcoming fiscal year following a brief public hearing at its July...
Beecher Fire Protection District graphic.4

Fire District Adopts Illinois Fire Protection Training Ordinance

Article Summary: At the July 24 meeting, the Beecher Fire Protection District Board of Trustees has unanimously passed a new ordinance related to the Illinois Fire Protection Training Act. The...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher Fire Protection District Board of Trustees for July 24, 2025

The Beecher Fire Protection District Board of Trustees finalized its financial plans for the upcoming year and adopted a new training ordinance at its meeting on July 24. The board's...
Tech company wants federal government to reimagine training, hiring

Tech company wants federal government to reimagine training, hiring

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A former top government official said the federal government has a rare chance to rethink how it hires and trains top talent amid an ongoing...
What are data centers and why do they matter?

What are data centers and why do they matter?

By Shirleen GuerraThe Center Square Data centers may not be visible to most Americans, but they are shaping everything from electricity use to how communities grow. These facilities house the...
Advocates look to state-based immigration programs

Advocates look to state-based immigration programs

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square As the Trump administration pursues its goal to engage in mass deportations across the country, immigration advocates and researchers are looking to state governments for...
Erika Kirk: 'The cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battlecry'

Erika Kirk: ‘The cries of this widow will echo around the world like a battlecry’

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Erika Kirk, widow of slain Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, mourned her husband at a news conference Friday night but vowed to keep his...
Routh trial gets a taste of Vienna sausages as it speeds along

Routh trial gets a taste of Vienna sausages as it speeds along

By Alan WootenThe Center Square As more lawmen were testifying Friday in the assassination case against Ryan Routh, and the defendant’s taste for Vienna sausages are emerging as key evidence....
Illinois quick hits: Migrant dead after incident with ICE; Pritzker signs vaccine access executive order

Illinois quick hits: Migrant dead after incident with ICE; Pritzker signs vaccine access executive order

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Migrant dead after incident with ICE A man is dead and a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer is injured after...
Kirk assassination suspect 'confessed' or 'indicated' crime to family member

Kirk assassination suspect ‘confessed’ or ‘indicated’ crime to family member

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The suspect in the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has been arrested after being turned in by his own family, after the suspect had...
Damning report card: California schools get an ‘F’

Damning report card: California schools get an ‘F’

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression Free Speech Rankings crowned California's Claremont McKenna College with a grade of B- as the best college in...
Lawmakers, advocates call for change after reading and math scores disappoint

Lawmakers, advocates call for change after reading and math scores disappoint

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – An Illinois lawmaker warns that, according to the latest Nation’s Report Card, Illinois students are still...
Migrant dead, ICE officer injured after Illinois incident

Migrant dead, ICE officer injured after Illinois incident

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A man is dead and a U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement officer is injured after the ICE...
House approves criminal migrant prison extension bill

House approves criminal migrant prison extension bill

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation on that would create harsher penalties for immigrants who enter the United States multiple times without permission or...