
PROMINENT DC ATTORNEY FEATURED AT AHI BUSINESS NETWORK LUNCHEON
WASHINGTON, DC—On Thursday, February 19, 2004, the American Hellenic
Institute’s (AHI) Business Network luncheon featured AHI member Thanos
Basdekis Esq., Attorney at Law, Regan, Halperin & Long, PLLC, at Capital Hilton Hotel. Mr. Basdekis gave a riveting presentation
on the various proposals for legal reform now dotting the political landscape,
and how those proposals, if passed, would impact the rights of victims
and defendants.
More specifically, Mr. Basdekis focused on three proposed
reforms: (1) the reform of medical malpractice litigation, (2)
new limits on "frivolous" lawsuits, and (3) caps on punitive damages.
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Thanos Basdekis speaking at the AHI Business Network Luncheon.
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On the subject of medical malpractice,
Mr. Basdekis explained that there does indeed exist a crisis,
but that the crisis has nothing to do with
lawsuits
being filed on behalf of victims. The real crisis is the crisis of medical
malpractice itself in this country, where quite shockingly, 98,000 people die
annually due
to medical errors. Lawsuits are simply a response to the woefully inadequate
medical care that many people receive here in the United States.
Mr. Basdekis
also explained that studies by independent entities such as the
National Center for State Court show that the number of tort filings
actually decreased, per capita, between 1989 and 1998, contrary to the false
statements
of many tort reform advocates. As Mr. Basdekis explained, "so-called tort reformers, if left to their own devices, would effectively eviscerate
a civil justice system that is rightly seen as a beacon of hope by regular
people in this country and all over the world."
Mr. Basdekis also pointed out that, due to the efforts of trial lawyers,
America is safer today than it has ever been. "When juries speak, corporate America listens," explained Mr. Basdekis, who cited the fact that numerous defective products—including
defectively designed cribs that once strangled infants, flammable children's
pajamas, and once-harmful medical devices—have all been redesigned
as a result of successful lawsuits brought by plaintiff's attorneys on
behalf of injured victims.
Mr. Basdekis is also an Adjunct Professor at
the Catholic University
of America's Columbus School of Law, where he has taught a class in Advanced
Federal Practice and Procedure since August 2000. He graduated with honors
from Yale Law School in 1997, where he also served for two years as an
editor on the Yale Law Journal. Following a clerkship for the Honorable Leonard B.
Sand, United States District Judge for the Southern District of New
York, Mr.
Basdekis joined
the trial law firm of Regan, Halperin & Long, and his successes include a recent $5 million verdict against the District
of Columbia in a pool accident case. Mr. Basdekis has also published
numerous articles, including one piece entitled "Perfection by Nullification" in the Yale Law Journal, and others entitled "The Ancient Greek Origins of the Modern American Legal System," "Winning Gold: The Role of Greeks in Modern American Sport," and "The Perils of Scapegoatism: A Hellenic Perspective."
For additional information, please contact
Angeliki Vassiliou at (202) 785-8430 or at angeliki@ahiworld.org. For general information
on AHI, see our Web site at www.ahiworld.org.
The AHI Business Network
is a division of the American Hellenic Institute initiated in 1989
to reach out to the business experience
of Greek
Americans and to put
it to work helping other Greek Americans. Its purpose is to share
business information and contacts. Its concept is people helping
people by sharing
experience, knowledge
and ideas.
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