- Judith Richardson Haimes
Judith Richardson Haimes is an American woman from
Philadelphia, PA , who worked as apsychic in Newark, Delaware, until anallergic reaction to theiodine tracer injected for aCAT scan allegedly disabled her. She suedTemple University Hospital and was awarded over $600,000 for pain and suffering and loss of income. This award was later overturned onappeal , 39 Pa. D. & C.3d 381 (Pa.Com.Pl. 1986). Haimes currently lives with her husband Allen Haimes in Florida and writes a syndicated newspaper column on grieving.Haimes's case was the subject of the book "Judith" by her husband.
The case is often cited in discussions of
frivolous lawsuit s and tort reform in theUnited States , but the facts are also often misrepresented. Contrary to popular belief, Haimes never claimed that a CAT scan had caused her to lose her psychic powers. In fact, the often alluded-to CAT scan never took place. Haimes only claimed that theheadache s resulting from her allergic reaction prevented her from earning a living as a psychic.Haimes previously earned a lucrative living by offering sessions in which she ostensibly read individual's auras, offering them medical as well as personal advice. She gained a reputation following an article in Philadelphia magazine that described seances she conducted at a wealthy Chestnut Hill patron's house.
References
* Galanter, Marc (1998). "An Oil Strike in Hell: Contemporary Legends About the Civil Justice System". Arizona Law Review, (40 Ariz. L. Rev. 717).
External links
* [http://www.marcgalanter.net/Documents/papers/ContemporaryLegendsAbouttheCivilJusticeSystem.pdf Galanter's article with numerous supporting citations]
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