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" ... A similar scandal erupted in Texas after a federal judge demanded the records for thousands of plaintiffs claiming they'd come down with silicosis and found most had already hit up the asbestos trusts for money. Doctors say the two conditions almost never occur in the same patient and the outbreak of silicosis claimed in the lawsuits would have dwarfed any recorded in the medical literature. ... "
" ... As just two of many examples, Judge Janis Graham Jack, U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Texas, in 2005 slammed plaintiff’s attorneys and their medical teams in a silicosis mass-tort litigation, finding that “these diagnoses were … manufactured for money … it is clear that the lawyers, doctors and screening companies were all willing participants." In January 2014, Judge George R. Hodges, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of North Carolina, cited widespread evidence that many plaintiff’s attorneys in asbestos litigations had for years manipulated and concealed evidence. ... "
" ... On the other hand, if the reviewing judge were to order disclosure, she could become the next Hon. Janis Graham Jack (S.D. Tex.), a federal district court judge who is justifiably famous for exposing the rampant fraud in silicosis cases, which came before her bench. Fraud in the asbestos docket is long overdue for a similar, thorough examination. The timing of the Company Doe decision may finally ensure that such an examination occurs. ... "
" ... There’s an example to show how this can work. Back in 2006 a federal judge who happened to also be a former nurse grew curious, like Garlock’s lawyers, about the wave of silicosis lawsuits flooding her court. Silicosis is a rare disease, she knew, yet there seemed to be an epidemic unreported in any of the mainstream medical journals. ... "
" ... When judges have penetrated that veil, they have found interesting facts. The most important example came when U.S. District Judge Janice Jack demanded the case files for thousands of plaintiffs in silicosis cases and after matching up their Social Security numbers with previous filings found many had already collected payments for asbestosis. Jack, a former nurse, threw out the silicosis cases since the two diseases are virtually never found in the same patient. ... "