Jim Bennett has made a name for himself defending some of this town’s more notorious folk. In 2004 the attorney asked the Missouri Supreme Court to toss out drunk-driving charges against St. Louis Rams defensive end Leonard Little. (The court refused, but Little was eventually acquitted of the charges following a jury trial.) In 2006 Bennett represented former American Equity Mortgage cofounder Ray Vinson in his nasty divorce from his wife and business partner, Deanna Vinson. (Despite courtroom testimony about Vinson’s aberrant behavior, Bennett convinced the judge to award Vinson 32 percent of the couple’s multimillion-dollar estate and receive another $16 million to walk away from the company.) But Bennett’s biggest claim to fame ought to be that he single-handedly sent former Metro president Larry Salci packing with a one-way ticket out of town last fall.
2008
- June 26, 2008
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Riverfront Times Names Bennett Best Lawyer of 2008
- March 24, 2008
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Comerford Named to Missouri Veterans’ Commission
Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt appointed several St. Louis area residents to positions on state boards, commissions and councils, the governor’s office announced Monday.
John Comerford, of St. Louis, was named to the Missouri Veterans’ Commission for a term ending Nov. 2, 2011. Comerford is an attorney at Dowd Bennett LLP and has served in the U.S. Navy.
- March 7, 2008
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Taxpayers’ Costs Mount in Fight Over State E-mails
The continuing battle over how Gov. Matt Blunt’s office has handled government e-mails is going to be costly for Missouri taxpayers.
This week, the governor hired three members of a St. Louis law firm – at $210 to $370 per hour – to defend him against a lawsuit filed by a fired state lawyer, Scott Eckersley.
Public money also is paying for private lawyers hired by four current or former aides to Blunt who are defendants in the lawsuit, state records show.
- March 7, 2008
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Blunt Hires Attorneys, Demands $540,000 to Turn Over E-mail Records
The continuing battle over how Gov. Matt Blunt’s office has handled government e-mails is going to be costly for Missouri taxpayers.
This week, the governor hired three members of a St. Louis law firm — at $210 to $370 per hour — to defend him against a lawsuit filed by a fired state lawyer, Scott Eckersley.
Public money also is paying for private lawyers hired by four current or former aides to Blunt who are defendants in the lawsuit, state records show.
- January 23, 2008
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Metro in Missouri to Pay $6M, Instead of $27M, in Attorneys’ Fees
Metro agreed in a settlement with the fired builders of its light-rail extension to Shrewsbury to pay just $6 million in attorneys’ fees. The Cross County Collaborative, which in November won a case filed by the transit agency, had sought $27 million in attorneys’ fees. “This is it. They’re paying us $6 million,” said Ed Dowd, a Dowd Bennett attorney who represented STV Inc., one of the four contractors Metro sued in 2002 on claims of fraud and mismanagement. “We hope [the settlement] helps Metro to continue to expand its light rail service for the people of St. Louis,” he said.
- January 23, 2008
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Metro to Pay Firms $6 Million
The Metro transit agency and the MetroLink designers it unsuccessfully blamed for cost overruns and delays on the Shrewsbury extension have reached the end of the line in their long-running legal battle.
Metro and the four design and construction management firms declared Tuesday that they had reached a $6 million settlement that includes the $2.56 million judgment a St. Louis County jury awarded the firms in November.
The settlement appears to save Metro from reimbursing tens of millions of dollars in legal fees and costs amassed by the defendant, the Cross County Collaborative, as well as its own additional costs if it appealed the verdicts. Metro told the Post-Dispatch onTuesday that its costs for pressing the lawsuit were $21.4 million through Dec. 31.
