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James "Jim the Hammer" Shapiro is an American attorney and author who was suspended from practicing law for one year in New York and Florida because of his misleading and aggressive television commercials and his attempt to solicit business from a comatose patient. [1]
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[edit] Career
Shapiro graduated from Boston University Law School. He is a member of the New York and Florida Bar, and the Plaintiff's Securities Lawyers Group. He founded three law firms and had offices in Broward County, Florida; Rochester, Syracuse, and Buffalo, New York.[2]
In the 1990s, Shapiro became known for his self-promotional television commercials[3] in which he promised to obtain large financial settlements for accident victims,[4] referred to himself as "the meanest, nastiest S.O.B. in town” [5] and claimed to have "aggressive courtroom prowess" [6]. He also began selling not-for-profit t-shirts which featured "a vicious beast with blood dripping from its fangs" and the words "Protected by Vicious S.O.B., Jim The Hammer Shapiro." [7]
In 2002, Christopher Wagner, a former client, sued Shapiro for malpractice. Wagner was injured in a 1995 motor vehicle accident and had responded to Shapiro's commercials. Wagner claimed he had incurred $USD182,000 in medical bills, but Shapiro's firm, Shapiro and Shapiro, encouraged him to accept a settlement of $65,000, promising more money could be obtained in a lawsuit against the state of New York. However, the state had no liability and Shapiro never pursued any further action on Wagner's behalf. [8]
In a video deposition during the trial, Shapiro admitted he had never tried a case in court and had lived in Florida since 1995. Wagner's lawyer, Robert Williams, claimed Shapiro's firm in Rochester was staffed by one lawyer who had only taken four cases to trial. The New York Supreme Court jury found Shapiro had engaged in misleading advertising and legal malpractice and awarded a $1.5 million judgment against Shapiro. [9]
Consequently, In 2004 he was suspended from practicing law for one year in New York. In 2005 he was also suspended from practicing law for one year in Florida. [10]
Shapiro said the decision to suspend him from practicing in New York was "unfair and unconstitutional" but claimed the ruling would have little effect because he had sold his Rochester office and was now promoting books. [11]
In December, 2004, four additional former clients sued Shapiro for unspecified damages, alleging he had engaged in misleading advertising and legal malpractice. [12]
[edit] Philanthropy
Despite his public image, Shapiro is known for his philanthropy in Rochester. Since 1996, he has donated $7,500 per year to elementary schools to purchase books. He has indicated that his goal is to put $600,000 worth of books into schools within ten years. In 1996, he donated 86.5 acres of land worth $800,000 to the Rochester YMCA. He has also donated land in Rochester valued at $120,000 to be used as a park for children. [13]
[edit] Publications
- Shapiro, J., Sue the Bastards, Advertising Consultants World Wide Inc., 1997
- Shapiro, J., Victims Rights to Maximum Cash,
- Shapiro, J., Million Dollar Lungs
- Shapiro, J., Injury Victims Rights to Maximum Cash, 1992
- Shapiro, J., Get Back All Your Lost Investments!
[edit] Notes
- ^ “Lawyer suspended over ads”, Times Union, 2 May, 2004
- ^ Jim "The Hammer" Shapiro's website accessed August 1, 2006
- ^ Daily Orange article 'S.O.B.' lawyer validates his title published June 14, 2006 and accessed July 30, 2006
- ^ "Flamboyant personal-injury lawyer dealt a setback", Associated Press Newswires, 14 June 2002
- ^ Case, Dick, “Annoyed viewers find they can’t nail ads by ‘The Hammer’,” ‘‘Syracuse Herald-Journal’’, 16 December 1996
- ^ Craig, Gary, Hammer' Shapiro on other end of lawsuit, Democrat and Chronicle published December 20, 2004 and accessed July 30, 2006
- ^ Case, Dick, Annoyed viewers find they can't nail ads by 'The Hammer', Syracuse Herald-Journal, December 16, 1996
- ^ O'Hara, Jim, Jury whacks TV ad lawyer: Jim "The Hammer" Shapiro hit with $1.5M malpractice, false advertising judgment, The Post-Standard Syracuse, 13 June 2002
- ^ O'Hara, Jim, “Jury whacks TV ad lawyer: Jim "The Hammer" Shapiro hit with $1.5M malpractice, false advertising judgment,” The Post-Standard Syracuse, 13 June 2002
- ^ The Florida Bar v. James J. Shapiro, Supreme Court of Florida, October 17, 2005
- ^ Mariani, John, Court rules "The Hammer' can't practice; judges: TV ads false and lawyer tried to get business from a comatose victim, The Post Standard/Herald-Journal, May 1, 2004
- ^ Craig, Gary, “’Hammer’ Shapiro on other end of lawsuit”, ‘’ Rochester Democrat and Chronicle’’, 20 December, 2004
- ^ Rochester Democrat and Chronicle