Kenneth J. Allen & Associates - Injury Attorneys

Illinois and Indiana Personal Injury Lawyers and Attorneys Trial and Civil Litigation Law Firm.

Passion. Commitment. Excellence.

Those three words best describe the driving forces behind Kenneth J. Allen & Associates. Our firm is devoted exclusively to the practice of Accident and Injury Law, and exclusively to the people - not corporations - seriously hurt or killed in incidents as varied as on-the-job accidents, semi-truck crashes, injuries from a defective product, or loss of life because of a doctor's medical malpractice.

As the only multi-state law firm in Valparaiso Indiana, Merrillville Indiana, Indianapolis Indiana, Northwest Indiana, Chicagoland, Joliet Illinois, Tinley Park Illinois, Chicago Illinois accepting serious injury and wrongful death cases, exclusively, Kenneth J. Allen & Associates is experienced and knowledgeable in the details and procedures that can make or break a case.

phone (219)465-6292 fax (219)477-5181
1109 Glendale Boulevard Valparaiso, IN 46383

Monday-Friday: 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Saturday-Sunday: closed

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5 HOUR ENERGY DRINKS: ARE THEY SAFE? FDA INVESTIGATING AS POPULAR 5-HOUR ENERGY DRINKS ALLEGEDLY CONNECTED TO 13 DEATHS

posted by kjalaw on Dec 2nd, 2012 at 9:11 am

Those little red bottles seem to be everywhere: watch TV and you’ll see commercials for5-Hour Energy drinks; shop for groceries or stop for gas and there they are: 5-Hour Energy bottles that claim to be safe and help you get through the day with all natural ingredients.

Lots of people need help getting some pep back in their step these days, and it’s no surprise that 5-Hour Energy drinks are very, very popular.  Maybe you’ve tried 5-Hour Energy yourself.

Thing is: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is now reportedly investigating 90+ reports that something bad happened to someone after they drank down a 5-Hour Energy drink — and out of these “adverse events,” 33 people were so ill they need to go to the hospital for treatment and 13 of these people died.

What happened?  After drinking 5-Hour Energy, reports of adverse effects include heart attacks, convulsions – one sadly was a spontaneous abortion.  So the FDA is investigating this product.

Once again, this is a products liability situation.  Right now, 5-Hour Energy Drinks may be worrisome and 5-Hour Energy Drinks may be subject to an investigation by the federal government, but no one has recalled a single bottle and right now, you can go down the street and buy as many of the little red bottles (extra caffeine versions come in black bottles) as you’d like.  Listen carefully and you’ll hear those profits cha-chinging in the coffers of the companies that make and sell 5-Hour Energy Drinks.

5-Hour Energy insists its product is safe: its CEO says that he and his son drink it every day and that the product has been thoroughly tested.  Admirably, he tells the media thathe would not sell a product that his family would not drink.

The FDA is considering 5-Hour Energy to be in the same pot of products as RedBull and Monster - energy drinks filled with caffeine that are marketing to teens and young adults.  (We are monitoring them, as well, read our earlier post.)  In a letter released last week, the FDA reported that it will probably ask outside experts to help analyze these products — something that the FDA has not seen the need to do before (get outside experts to test things).

Meanwhile, this product is being sold in local stores and lots of people are buying and using it.  If you or a loved one becomes sick or has problems after drinking an energy drink, then it is important not to delay but to get medical treatment as soon as possible.  That’s always the first priority — figuring out what legal claims may exist should wait until a medical crisis has passed with skilled medical care.

 

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PRESCRIPTION DRUG OVERDOSES IN USA MUST BE STOPPED: ONE LESSON FROM WHITNEY HOUSTON MEDIA COVERAGE

posted by kjalaw on Feb 17th, 2012 at 9:42 am

The country is still reeling over the untimely death of Whitney Houston at the age of 48.  The State of New Jersey is flying its flags at half-staff and her small, private New Jersey funeral will be broadcast live, online, to comfort her millions of fans in the United States and worldwide.

And amidst the chatter about her talent as a singer and an actor there is the recurring question of why.  Why did Whitney Houston die? No one will know until the toxicology results are back and the medical examiner makes the final determinations.

However, media coverage as well as an outraged and upset American public are wondering about the impact of prescription drugs upon this tragedy.  Some, including celebrities like American Idol’s Steven Tyler, are operating under the assumption that a combination of prescription drugs and alcohol led to Ms. Houston’s demise.

There is some good to come out of this bad – and here it is:  if the coverage of Whitney Houston’s death bring more public awareness about the very real danger of drugs that have been distributed by a doctor through a pharmacy, then a life may be saved.  Because prescription drugs are killing people in this country.

Prescription Drugs Kill People

According to the Center for Disease Control, 100 people die in the United States EVERY DAY from a prescription drug overdose. The CDC also reports that there has been a 300% increase in overdose prescription drug deaths in this country since 1999; more people died from taking pills that a doctor had prescribed than those who died from cocaine and heroin overdoses combined.

That’s scary, isn’t it?

Here’s what happens. Most of these prescription drug killers are prescribed to deal with pain, or the brain’s perception of pain.  They are powerful, they have to be in order to block the brain’s message of “pain! pain!” They also slow down breathing.  Some may find they are having to take more and more just to get relief.  Big enough dose, and that slow breathing may lead to breathing simply stopping.  No oxygen, the person dies.

Prescription Drugs Mean Big Money for Big Pharma

These pills are sold by pill manufacturers and they are then distributed by pharmacies, hospitals, clinics, etc. under a doctor’s okay.  And they have been very big business in the past ten years:  in 2010, the sales of prescription painkillers was 400% higher than 1999.  The CDC brings this home with this fact:  there were enough of these pills prescribed in 2010 to medicate every American adult around-the-clock for one month.

Products Liability or Medical Malpractice? Legal Remedies for Wrongful Death by Prescription Drugs

Right now, the reality is that there is a major crisis in this country with people dying from pills they are getting from a prescription source.  Until the law starts to regulate this problem, the only laws that stand for justice at this point are those allowing injury victims and their families to sue for the harm they have experienced from prescription drugs.  These may be due to medical malpractice by a doctor or health care provider, or because of defective products or other product liability concerns, and it may all too often be filed as a wrongful death case by those grieving the loss of a loved one.

Congress and state legislatures need to do more here.  The FDA has shown itself insufficient in protecting the public from drug harm.  We need change.

Image source: Center for Disease Control.

 

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FDA WHISTLEBLOWERS SUE FDA FOR SPYING ON THEIR PERSONAL EMAILS: MESSAGES TO CONGRESS ABOUT PRODUCT DANGERS WERE BEING MONITORED BY FDA

posted by kjalaw on Feb 2nd, 2012 at 7:34 am

More news that should serve as a warning to the American public that the products that they buy on their grocery store shelves and that they purchase as over the counter drugs or as prescription medicine should not be blindly trusted: it seems that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has just been sued by six doctors and scientists – all former employees of the FDA.

Why?  These top professionals have filed a lawsuit because they have found out that the FDA was spying on these doctors’ and scientists’ personal email accounts (Gmail).

Seems that the FDA was interested in reading the personal emails of these Six FDA Employees because these six individuals had had the courage to tell members of Congress that they were concerned because the FDA was going ahead and approving products which these six FDA employees thought were NOT SAFE.

Media investigations have occurred and now, the news stories include the release of federal government documents confirming that the personal emails were monitored, and for a long time, too.  Apparently, according to a Washington Post expose, the FDA employees’ personal email accounts were being spied upon for over two years.

Here, though, the big news isn’t a media scoop.  Here, these six courageous individuals haven’t just voiced concerns to Congress — now, they’ve gone and filed a civil lawsuit in federal court based upon the sneaky behavior of the FDA.   They are claiming damages to their careers because of what’s happened, among other things.

It’s going to be more of a right of privacy case more than a fight over whether or not those products are indeed unsafe.  The safety of the products are not the focus of this litigation (but should be a very, very big lesson to us all).

Was the constitutional right to privacy guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution violated when the FDA instituted surveillance on its own employees?  (The FDA, of course, will argue no; that by using the work computers, these folk couldn’t have any reasonable expectation of privacy.)

Bottom line, products liability laws exist in Indiana and Illinois and every other state in the union because all too often, Americans are hurt or killed by products (food  and drugs among them) that they have legitimately purchased at a store with the expectation that the product is safe to use.   Americans cannot depend upon manufacturers, distributors, sellers, etc. to protect them from dangerous products.   Unsafe products are put into the marketplace all the time.

Now, the Federal and Drug Administration’s dependability and integrity has been called into question by this agency spying upon employees who were whistleblowing about product safety to members of Congress.

If you or a loved one has been hurt or injured or even suffered a wrongful death because of food or drugs or medication — then your most solid and dependable avenue of justice remains with the personal injury system of  justice and filing a products liability lawsuit under state law.

 

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More on Declan Sullivan v Notre Dame

posted by kjalaw on Nov 13th, 2010 at 7:36 am

On Tuesday, we recounted the tragic death of young Declan Sullivan, who fell to his death while on the job from a scissor lift while videotaping a Notre Dame football practice. Kenneth J. Allen’s expert comments to ESPN about the products liability and workers’ compensation lawsuit possibilities for the Sullivan family were included, and they weren’t optimistic.

In a separate interview with John Williams at WGN, Kenneth J. Allen also provided his expert analysis to the question of the email letter sent by Notre Dame’s president, Rev. John Jenkins, to the entire Notre Dame community on Friday, stating, “Declan Sullivan was entrusted to our care, and we failed to keep him safe. …We at Notre Dame, and ultimately I, as president, are responsible.”

There are those that will urge Notre Dame to limit the responsibility referenced in Rev. Jenkin’s letter to the $7500 amount that is the extent of their legal responsibility under Indiana law.  However, according to Ken Allen, that’s not the moral responsibility of Notre Dame (and its $1 billion endowment) to this boy’s family.

Let’s give Rev. Jenkins the benefit of the doubt here, and assume that he meant the best of things in that letter sent out last week.  And, let’s hope that the defense attorneys don’t sway Notre Dame away from doing the right thing for Declan Sullivan.

To listen to the entire Kenneth J.  Allen interview on this subject, go here.

 

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