Posted on
January 5, 2013 in
This morning Lisa Simeone (TSA News) brings us word of a TSA lawsuit that continues in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California:
[Nadine Hays] was arrested, handcuffed, strip-searched, and jailed after the TSA decided she was too uppity.…Prosecutors later charged her with battery.
The charge was dismissed. Hays is suing the TSA.
But apparently she’s representing herself in court….The latest news is that if she doesn’t cut her complaint down to size (25 double-spaced pages instead of 129), her case will be thrown out.
I’m on Nadine Hays’s side. I hope she wins. I also hope she gets some professional legal advice.
Will Nadine Hays get some professional legal advice? There are many reasons someone might be unrepresented in her §1983 action. Among them:
- She might not have sought counsel;
- She might not have money to pay counsel;
- She might not have a good case; and
- She might be batty.
Section 1983 is intended to punish violations of our civil rights including those that do not require broken bones or blood, but it's hard to find a civil-rights lawyer to take on a case that doesn't include such injuries for a contingent fee. (Section 1983 provides for attorney's fees if the plaintiff prevails, but apparently the math doesn't work out very well.) If you're suing on principle, you'd better be prepared to fund the lawsuit yourself. Most people don't have the resources to fund a lawsuit.
Finding a second lawyer to replace the first lawyer on a case is difficult and expensive—the second lawyer, if she is at all competent, is going to look closely both at what the first lawyer did (to determine what was screwed up, and whether it can be fixed) and why the client and the first lawyer parted ways (to determine if there is something wrong with the case or with the client).
Finding a lawyer to replace a pro se party on a case is even more difficult and expensive—the pro se has, almost by definition, screwed up the case; and there is likely something wrong with both case and client that no lawyer took it the case in the first place. While not every pro se lawsuit is filed by a madman, enough of them are that pro se filing might raise a reasonable presumption of madness. "Mad" doesn't mean "wrong," but lawyers often will decline to invite more madness into their lives, even for a case that is a potential winner.
Here, we don't have to look further than Hays's Second Amended Complaint to see why she doesn't have a lawyer:
Defendant Mary Frances Prevost (hereinafter "PREVOST") was Plaintiff's second criminal attorney. Plaintiff appreciates the fact that the criminal charges were finally dismissed and gives credit to PREVOST for helping to see that accomplished. Plaintiff is suing PREVOST at this time, however, for her unethical practices and for her failure to comply with Court orders. Plaintiff is willing to remove PREVOST as a defendant if she will apologize for her wrongs and simply speak honestly with Plaintiff so Plaintiff can properly prepare for her Federal lawsuit trial.
From Pages 18-19 of the Second Amended Complaint (pdf) in Hays v. U.S.
That is, she is trying to sue, in a §1983 action, the criminal-defense lawyer who won her criminal case, making the §1983 suit possible. Not only that, but she's suing Prevost on principle, using the lawsuit to try to get from her something that the court cannot order Prevost to do.
Hays is also suing her first criminal-defense lawyer, who didn't get her criminal case dismissed, and the first judge on her criminal case, asking that each of them purge himself of his mistakes and "speak honestly" with her. (Want an uncooperative witness to speak honestly with you? Take his deposition.)
There are clients who will attack their previous lawyers with lawsuits and grievances at every turning. Ms. Hays appears to be one of those. Such clients are as entitled to counsel as anyone else, but aside from alienating the people who could have continued to help and support them (for example, by "speaking honestly" with them) they narrow their choices of counsel in the future. Few lawyers want to sign on for a turn in the barrel.
Prevost advertises that she handles civil-rights cases. She presumably had an opportunity to evaluate Hays's §1983 case when she was representing her on the criminal case. Ms. Hays may already have received professional legal advice that she didn't want to hear or follow. Odds are that Simeone's hopes are forlorn, and Hays is not going to find a lawyer to take on her case. Which is a shame, because TSA needs to be well and thoroughly sued at every opportunity.
I’m a bit sorry that this arose in the course of suing the TSA, not just for the obvious reason (it’s always good to sue the TSA) but because the aspect of the post about batty people and counsel is an evergreen issue, and one that could be used as a staple of the blawgosphere. People need to understand why no lawyer will touch them, and this case seems an awfully good tutorial.
I am routinely threatened with bar complaints from potential clients whose “slamdunk,” “million-dollar” civil rights claims I declined. (Potential client: “People get millions for spilling coffee on themselves, this [incident without any physical injury or economic harm] is much worse.”)
I used to honestly tell everyone if I figured their case was unlikely produce a verdict substantially in excess of the costs of the suit, but that invariably lead to these clients believing that I was minimizing the horrible trauma of their [insert routine non-violent civil rights violation here], and so now I give most of them some mealy-mouthed non-answer that will hopefully placate them and get them to move on to another attorney.
Have some empathy, Max. By the time they get to you, they’ve already been turned away from every lawyer in Philly and you’re their last hope. Anyway, that explains why you are so good at mealy-mouthed non-answers.
Thanks for the insight, Guy On Twitter All Day.
Wow, Mark, thanks for giving us the inside scoop! I’m sorry to hear that it does, indeed, sound like Hays is compounding her problems. Sigh. These kinds of people don’t help us in this struggle.
And I agree about the expense of a lawsuit. I’ve grown bloggily blue in the face from repeating over and over that “sue them!” is cold comfort. Lawsuits are expensive, time consuming, and soul sucking. Whatever the grievance, most people can’t afford to sue.
Thanks for letting me know I’m being sued. I handled that case for a flat fee that was about 26% of what I should have charged. No good deed goes unpunished.
This was a cute research discovery. Why not tell the truth, Mary. You did not win the case for me. The only reason we got the case dismissed and did not go to trial was because Olga Baker thought I took the plea bargain!
If I had gone to trial, I probably would have been found guilty with the tainted evidence they had. The individual that signed the Citizen’s Arrest form was not even involved in the airport incident at all. You did NO investigative work. You showed up in Court 2 times and charged me $15,000!
I told you the tug-of-war was with the screener and NOT the supervisor. You did not pursue obtaining the ID’s of the agents. Your negligence has cost me 2 years of arguing in Federal Court. This case will move into discovery soon and I will prove that my allegations are all right. Thanks for the grief!
I know you still have not provided me with my complete file, and that was a court order by Judge Parlen McKenna. I truly do not have a good taste in my mouth for any attorneys at this point.