Weitz & Luxenberg Supports National Asbestos Awareness Week to Highlight
Diseases.
Underscores that Exposure is an Ongoing Health Risk
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The recent news that W. R. Grace & Company agreed to pay the federal government $250 million for environmental cleanup of asbestos around its vermiculite mining operations in Libby, Montana, makes it all too plain the public’s ongoing risk of exposure to asbestos, and the need to raise awareness of asbestos diseases such as lung cancer and mesothelioma.
With this in mind, and in recognition of the United States Senate’s
resolution designating the first week of April as National Asbestos Awareness
Week, Weitz & Luxenberg P.C. (www.weitzlux.com) congratulates the Asbestos
Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), which proposed the legislation along with
Senator Harry Reid, and continues to work toward informing communities about
asbestos-related health risks.
“The ADAO has been highly effective in
alerting the public to the dangers of asbestos. We join them in honoring the
thousands who struggle with the health effects caused by asbestos exposure,”
said Jessica Russell, an attorney with the Asbestos Litigation unit at Weitz
& Luxenberg.
Weitz & Luxenberg has been known since 1986 for its
preeminent role in the prosecution of asbestos cases, last year securing a $37
million asbestos verdict in two lung cancer cases in a reverse bifurcated trial.
The firm also won a $25 million jury verdict in 2006 in a trial against
DaimlerChrysler AG for a New York City brake reliner who lost his right lung to
mesothelioma. Successes reach as far back as 1991, when the firm won a historic
consolidated trial for men who worked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in the 1940s and
1950s. Weitz & Luxenberg P.C. represented 36 clients in that case, securing
verdicts of $75 million. The firm represents tens of thousands of individuals
suffering from asbestos related diseases.
Ms. Russell, having worked
with numerous clients whose lives have been affected by asbestos, sees the
imperative of raising public awareness. “The passage of the Senate Proclamation
declaring the week of April 1, 2008 as ‘National Asbestos Awareness Week,’ is
one tool in bringing to the fore the national crisis of the thousands of workers
and families that have suffered catastrophic illnesses because of their
exposure,” she said.
The ADAO, founded in 2004, advocates for asbestos
victims and families in order to raise public awareness about the dangers of
asbestos exposure and disease. The group held its annual Asbestos Awareness
Conference in Detroit, where patients, families, medical professionals,
researchers and legislators gathered to provide important information for their
membership on topics including developments in the treatment of asbestos
disease, public awareness campaigns and the current legislation seeking a
complete ban of asbestos products in the United States.
People who have
been harmed by asbestos may obtain a free legal review of their case by
completing the form on this page.



Mesothelioma Information: Weitz & Luxenberg Press Release