ERISA fiduciary lawsuits: an oasis for plaintiffs’ lawyers?

A very analytical article by David M. Gische and Jo Ann Abramson of Ross, Dixon & Bell LLP at Findlaw.com: "Corporate Fiduciary Liability Claims In The Post-Enron Era." The article provides a detailed discussion of the class-action litigation that is…

A very analytical article by David M. Gische and Jo Ann Abramson of Ross, Dixon & Bell LLP at Findlaw.com: “Corporate Fiduciary Liability Claims In The Post-Enron Era.” The article provides a detailed discussion of the class-action litigation that is going on in the ERISA arena against ERISA plan fiduciaries of 401(k) plans. The article gives a rundown of the Enron, Global Crossing, WorldCom, and Qwest cases which are making their way through the courts and provides a discussion about the parallel securities law claims which may provide double exposure for insurers, if the ERISA claims succeed.

Another article by Jason Hoppin for the Recorder at Law.com–“A Matter of Trust: Stung by corporate collapses, workers look to ERISA for relief“–also discusses the “burgeoning arena of ERISA cases filed on behalf of company employees who lose their retirement savings when corporate scandals hit.” He calls it “an oasis for plaintiffs’ lawyers, where you can make new law, the bar is friendly on both sides of the aisle, there are few competitors and, of course, huge recoveries are the norm.”

CorpLawBlog at a post here and Securities Beacon have also reported on the subject today.

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