The TRUE Stella Awards for 2004



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True Stella Awards #58: 31 January 2005              www.StellaAwards.com
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The TRUE Stella Awards -- 2004 Winners
by Randy Cassingham
Issued 31 January 2005

  Unlike the FAKE cases that have been highly circulated online for the
last several years (see http://www.StellaAwards.com/bogus.html for
details), the following cases have been researched from public sources
and are confirmed TRUE by the ONLY legitimate source for the Stella
Awards: www.StellaAwards.com . To confirm this copy is legitimate, see
http://www.StellaAwards.com/2004.html

                                   -v-

THE RUNNERS UP FOR THE 2003 TRUE STELLA AWARDS ARE:

#6: The Tribune Co. of Chicago, Ill. The newspaper chain owns several
  newspapers, as well as the Chicago Cubs baseball team. One of its
  newspaper carriers was Mark Guthrie, 43, of Connecticut. One of its
  ball players was Mark Guthrie, 38, of Illinois. The company's payroll
  department mixed the two up, putting the ballplayer's paycheck into
  the paper carrier's bank account. The carrier allowed them to take
  back 90 percent of the improperly paid salary, and said they could
  have the rest after they gave him a full accounting to ensure he not
  only got his own pay, but wouldn't have any tax problems for being
  paid $300,000(!) extra. The Tribune Co., rather than provide that
  reasonable assurance, instead sued him for the rest of the money.

#5: "High Tech" retailer Sharper Image sells a lot of its "Ionic Breeze"
  air filters. As part of a comparative review of many air filters,
  Consumer Reports magazine found the "Ionic" unit was the worst
  performer. SI complained, saying it didn't do a "fair" test. CU asked
  what sort of test should be done, but SI never replied -- until it
  sued CU. A federal judge ruled the suit not only had no merit, but was
  actually an illegal attempt to squelch public discussion. SI was
  ordered to pay CU $400,000 to cover its legal defense costs.

#4: Edith Morgan, mother of Kansas City Chiefs football star Derrick
  Thomas, who died after being thrown from his SUV in a crash while
  speeding in a snowstorm. Morgan said Thomas's neck was broken because
  the SUV's roof collapsed a few inches -- not from rolling down the
  highway because he wasn't wearing a seatbelt -- and sued General
  Motors. Her lawyer begged jurors to award more than $100 million in
  damages, perhaps more -- he "did not want to put an upper limit on
  it." GM pointed out that Thomas's oversize SUV was exempt from federal
  roof crush standards, yet it met them anyway. The jury sent a message:
  of that $100 million, it awarded Morgan ...nothing.

#3: Tanisha Torres of Wyndanch, N.Y. The woman sued Radio Shack for
  misspelling her town as "Crimedanch" on her cell phone bill. She
  didn't even ask them to change it; she just sued. "I'm not a
  criminal," she whined. "My son plays on the high school football
  team." Yeah, that makes sense. The name "Crimedanch" is a common joke;
  police in the area confirm it's a high-crime area. Still, Torres
  claimed she suffered "outrage" and "embarrassment" at having to see
  that spelling on her private phone bill. The suit seeks unspecified
  damages.

#2: Homecomings Financial, a subsidiary of GMAC Financial Services, which
  is a division of General Motors. The finance company accepted a change
  of address notice from identity thieves for the account belonging to
  Robert and Suzanne Korinke. The thieves ran up a $142,000 debt, and
  the Korinkes notified Homecomings of the fraud the moment they
  discovered it. Homecomings sued them two years later, saying the
  couple's "negligence" is what "caused the injury to Homecomings," not
  the fact that the company accepted a change of address from fraudsters
  -- and then gave them all the money they could drain. The victims got
  the company to drop the suit, which demanded $74,000 plus attorney's
  fees, after shelling out $5,000 in legal fees -- an outcome the
  couple's lawyer called "really lucky".

AND THE WINNER of the 2004 Stella Award: Mary Ubaudi of Madison County,
  Ill. Ubaudi was a passenger in a car that got into a wreck. She put
  most of the blame on the deepest pocket available: Mazda Motors, who
  made the car she was riding in. Ubaudi demands "in excess of $150,000"
  from the automaker, claiming it "failed to provide instructions
  regarding the safe and proper use of a seatbelt." One hopes Mazda's
  attorneys make her swear in court that she has never before worn a
  seatbelt, has never flown on an airliner, and that she's too stupid to
  figure out how to fasten a seatbelt.

TO CONFIRM THE VALIDITY OF THESE CASES, get more information on the True
  Stella Awards, or sign up for a free e-mail subscription to new cases
  as they are issued, see http://www.StellaAwards.com/2004.html

Copyright 2005 www.StellaAwards.com . This message may be forwarded as
  long as it remains complete and unaltered.


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