If over-hype means a few
lawyers get scared into asking the right questions, I can live with the over-hype.
Even highly paid doctors and
lawyers get scared looking at the price.
Not exact matches
A defense
lawyer involved in asbestos cases in Manhattan speculated, «Judge Madden is a little
scared of some of the adverse publicity she's
getting.»
If you're on the road you've
got everything on your computer but you need Internet access, you hear all the stories about or even in a coffee shop, people being able to look at what information, what sites you're visiting, if you're using an unsecured provider and that ought to
scare the heck out of all the
lawyers because you just can't afford to have your confidential data be compromised in any way.
They're
scared to, they don't know a
lawyer, they think they can
get by without one, all of those things.
But here's the kicker: the plaintiff isn't going to know if they can even
get that information about an epidemic, or if the expert report is good enough, until after they've filed the suit and have litigated it to summary judgment,
scaring off many
lawyers from filing these cases in the first place unless the outbreak has already been disclosed publicly.