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LOUISVILLE — Former superstar lawyer Stan Chesley, who was disbarred for bilking former clients in Kentucky’s notorious fen-phen scandal, has sued five of them — and their lawyer — to try ...
Cunningham and another disbarred Lexington-area attorney, William Gallion, were sentenced to federal prison in 2009 after being found guilty of defrauding more than 400 clients out of millions of ...
The lawsuit and indictment are the latest developments in a scandal that began in 2001, when famed Cincinnati lawyer Stan Chesley helped Gallion, Cunningham and Mills negotiate a $200 million ...
Hillcrest Farm, the Georgetown home of former lawyer and thoroughbred stable owner Shirley Cunningham Jr., will be auctioned April 29.
In the 1990s, Fen-Phen became popular as a drug cocktail to suppress appetite and help people lose weight. While the combination of drugs may have helped some people drop pounds, published medical research indicated that it was associated with damage to heart valves.
Stan Chesley -- the "Master of Disaster," the "Prince of Torts" -- is not going gently into that good night.
Lawyers William Gallion, Shirley Cunningham Jr. and Melbourne Mills Jr. sign up 440 patients and represent them in a class action lawsuit. The attorneys negotiate a $200 million settlement. Clients begin to receive checks... but the numbers don't add up.
In the mid-90's, millions of Americans looking to lose weight line up for the newest wonder drug…Fen-Phen. But, it's not long before patients realize that this "miracle drug" is no miracle. Scientists link the drug to heart disease and a rare but fatal condition called Primary Pulmonary Hypertension.
Lawyers William Gallion, Shirley Cunningham Jr. and Melbourne Mills Jr. sign up 440 patients and represent them in a class action lawsuit. The attorneys negotiate a $200 million settlement. Clients begin to receive checks... but the numbers don't add up.
In the mid-90's, millions of Americans looking to lose weight line up for the newest wonder drug…Fen-Phen. But, it's not long before patients realize that this "miracle drug" is no miracle. Scientists link the drug to heart disease and a rare but fatal condition called Primary Pulmonary Hypertension.