Events and awards
Since its inception in 1949, CAALA has held an annual installation and awards dinner in Beverly Hills.The Armenian Reporter, " Garo Mardirossian installed as president-elect of Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles", 1-31-2009, At the event, CAALA recognizes its "Trial Lawyer of the Year," "Appellate Lawyer of the Year," "Trial Judge of the Year," and "Appellate Justice of the Year." In recent years, the awards presentation has been attended by numerous members of the judiciary and state government; for example, the 2010 event included 50 judges and justices. The first African American to be honored as CAALA's "Trial Lawyer of the Year," wasControversy
In 1985, when a telephone hotline opened up to warn doctors about litigious patients, CAALA retaliated by creating a hotline that patients could call to see whether their doctor had been sued for malpractice during the prior 10 years."Physicians, Attorneys Wage Hotline War Over Litigation Lists", The Associated Press, 12-25-1985 The Los Angeles County Medical Association called the CAALA hotline "a sham and a shame, a miscarriage and a corruption of justice." CAALA claimed the hotline would increase business for doctors with good records by steering patients away from the small minority of doctors who are responsible for most malpractice claims. In 1994, in a move with national repercussions, the organization became the first trial-bar association to change its name to avoid use of the phrase "trial lawyers."Business Wire, 11-14-1994, "Public confusion with criminal defense lawyers causes Los Angeles Trial Lawyers Association to change name to Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles" It claimed that the switch from "Los Angeles Trial Lawyers Association" to "Consumers Attorneys Association of Los Angeles" was carried out after the organization commissioned a survey that showed 70% of the public associated the phrase "trial lawyer" with criminal-defense attorneys. Tort-reform advocates accused CAALA of adopting its new name in an attempt to confuse voters and conceal that the organization's members are largely personal-injury lawyers who file lawsuits in order to obtain large contingency fees. When California's state trial-bar association followed CAALA's lead and adopted a "consumer attorney" moniker, tort-reform groups accused both organizations of "consumer fraud" and said the trial lawyers' attempt to hide within the pro-consumer movement was "obvious and repulsive."PR Newswire, "Trial lawyers gather this weekend to vote on whether to include 'consumer' in association name", 1-26-1995 In 1995, tort-reform groups claimed that CAALA had given hundreds of thousands of dollars to a consumer activist in order to buy his public opposition to tort-reform initiatives.Metropolitan News Enterprise, "Tort Reform Backers Blast Opponent for Fund-Raising", 12-21-1995 The supporters of the initiatives asserted that CAALA had a "stranglehold on consumers" and that the organization relied on facially neutral pro-consumer groups to do its "dirty work." CAALA's supporters contended that the organizations making those accusations were themselves funded by the insurance industry. In 1996, CAALA publicly attacked ABC's John Stossel for representing himself as a consumer reporter despite having received hundreds of thousands of dollars from corporate interest groups.Business Wire, "The trouble with 'The Trouble With Lawyers'", 1-4-1996 It claimed that the so-called "Loser Pays" system that Stossel advocated as a way of decreasing litigation would actually deprive ordinary Americans of access to the civil justice system, by forcing them to risk financial ruin if they attempted to hold corporations responsible in court.External links
References
{{reflist * * * * Legal organizations based in the United States Organizations established in 1949