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Kings Of Tort

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With over 200 individual fact citations into over 100 different sources, Kings of Tort has been impeccably researched. It used primary sources like the highly acclaimed book by Michael Orey entitled Assuming the Risk and Dan Zegart's book Civil Warriors. The book has also sourced information via articles from publications and media outlets such as the Clarion Ledger, the Sun Herald, the Northeast MS Daily Journal, WLBT, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the New Yorker, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Time Magazine, PBS Frontline and Vanity Fair. That research has been supplemented with interviews and perspective from those on all sides of this complicated story. All that were significantly involved in this story were invited in writing to participate. Most notably, Dickie Scruggs, Paul Minor, former Attorney General Mike Moore and Attorney General Jim Hood all declined (either directly or through legal counsel) to be interviewed after multiple attempts. Wherever possible, the book used direct quotes and fact references from the legal documents involving all of these cases, which are all made available in the reference area.

288 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 27, 2010

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About the author

Alan Lange

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for David.
1,630 reviews179 followers
June 15, 2021
After reading the Fall of the House of Zeus written by someone who had been a friend of Dickie Scruggs, I felt bad that he got as much jail time as he did. Now that I have read the prosecution's version of events I have regained my sanity. He played the system for his own gain and really got himself into trouble by not keeping his word on deals he made with his own partners in litigation. As the saying goes, there is no honor among thieves. Former partners knew that about him and were quick to cut their own deals with the prosecutor. Very well written. I do still stand by my review of the pro-Scruggs book because it was also very well written.
Profile Image for Debbie Howell.
148 reviews7 followers
February 24, 2010
Thorough, well-researched account of the fall of Dickie Scruggs, the Mississippi lawyer famous for suing Big Tobacco. The story itself is fascinating and the authors have done a great job of laying out the whole sordid mess in a detailed, chronological account. It was not a captivating read in the early chapters, but the information was needed to understand what came later. Another problem was that there were so many people involved it was hard to keep straight which crooked lawyer was which. While I appreciated the logical, thorough way the authors told the story, I can't help but thinking that such a great story deserved a little more Southern storytelling skill.
Profile Image for Rhys.
Author 2 books2 followers
January 19, 2010
Kings of Tort

By Alan Lange and Tom Dawson


Dickie Scruggs is a real person, a recent phonon, a crusader to the damaged and an icon to attorneys seeking the fortunes to be made from the mass litigation and the “magic jurisdictions” created by political influence. Dickie Scruggs is the ‘King of Torts’ of John Grisham’s novel and the central figure of very real, sensational scandals that have held the public attention for the last 2 years.

This book is fascinating as a non-fictional look at the blinding greed and destructive ambition that characterizes our trusted barristers of the judicial system – for good and evil. Those who investigated its many plots and crimes compellingly convey its story.

This is a necessary read for those interested in our judiciary mess and our state electoral processes, the influences so common in the national and the local politics and legislative process, and the singular efforts made to balance the scales of justice by ordinary individuals.
Profile Image for Lynn Shurden.
668 reviews4 followers
July 18, 2011
Easy enough read compared to Wilkie's book on the same subject. However, please tell me why authors don't know the use of objective pronouns??? Has the English language really changed that much? It is not correct to use "between he and I".
Profile Image for Vtpowell.
26 reviews
December 21, 2009
Fascinating story of southern politics and reads like a mystery novel..
Profile Image for Tracy.
151 reviews
April 29, 2014
Very well written book that takes a look at the world of southern politics and law. A very detailed look at the Scruggs case in Mississippi. If you like legal drama, you will like this book.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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