Tag Archive for 'diet drug'

Fen-phen jury: Gallion and Cunningham guilty on all counts

- bmusgrave@herald-leader.com

FRANKFORT — After deliberating for two days, seven women and five men convicted William Gallion and Shirley Cunningham Jr. of conspiracy and eight counts of wire fraud.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

This is the second trial for Gallion and Cunningham on charges that they took millions of dollars from 440 former clients in a 2001 fen-phen settlement. Their first trial ended in a mistrial after the jury deliberated for eight days but could not reach a verdict. Melbourne Mills Jr., who was originally charged with Gallion and Cunningham, was acquitted by the same jury.

Prosecutors say Gallion and Cunningham lied and deliberately told half-truths about what happened to the $200 million settlement so all of the lawyers on the case could keep the bulk of the settlement.

Defense attorneys said that Gallion and Cunningham knew little about class-action law at the time the case was settled. If mistakes were made ,those mistakes were unintentional, they argued.

Stephen Dobson, a lawyer for Cunningham, said there was little evidence or testimony that showed that Cunningham was directly involved in the negotiations of the settlement or how the money was disbursed after the case was settled.

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Judge delays Fen-phen retrial until Thursday

- slannen@herald-leader.com

The federal trial of two Lexington-area lawyers accused of bilking their clients out of millions of dollars in settlement money will resume on Thursday.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Proceedings were suspended until 8:30 a.m. Thursday in U.S. District Court trial in Frankfort due to illness, according to an order filed Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Danny Reeves. The filing does not provide any details about the illness.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. and William Gallion are accused of cheating their former clients out of $94 million in a settlement of the fen-phen diet drug lawsuit. They are standing trial on charges of wire fraud and conspiracy.

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Arguments heard in fen-phen case

- bortiz@herald-leader.com

FRANKFORT — Opening statements were under way in the retrial of two Lexington area lawyers accused of taking $94 million that should have gone to 440 clients, who had sued the maker of the diet drug fen-phen.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Lawyers for the federal government and the defendants, Shirley Cunningham Jr. and William Gallion, made small tweaks to their case from a trial last summer, which resulted in a hung jury and a mistrial. Another defendant, Melbourne Mills, was acquitted.

Cunningham and Gallion are accused of conspiracy and wire fraud over the 2001 settlement of a lawsuit against the maker of the fen-phen diet drug. fen-phen, which was recalled after some studies indicated it could cause heart damage. The lawsuit was settled for $200 million.

As they laid out their case Wednesday in U.S. District Court, prosecutors spent more time explaining class-action law — a subject that many lawyers find difficult to understand.

Prosecutors say Cunningham and Gallion — and their staff — disregarded ethics rules by refusing to disclose the gross amount of the settlement to their clients, paying them less than they were entitled to under the settlement, and falsely telling clients that they would go to jail if they told anyone what they received, Assistant U.S. Attorney Laura Voorhees.

The lawyers used the settlement-confidentiality clause to keep their clients in the dark, Voorhees said.

“They used this provision like it was a club,” she said.

Under their contracts with clients, Cunningham and Gallion were entitled to one-third of the settlement. They took nearly half of it, Voorhees said.

The lawyers also are accused of wrongfully diverting $20 million of the settlement into a charitable trust. During the first trial, the defense argued that that money was needed to pay future fen-phen victims who were not in the lawsuit. Defense attorneys said that, according to the settlement agreement, Cunningham and Gallion were personally liable for paying those clients.

But Voorhees, anticipating such arguments Wednesday, said the settlement agreement limited the lawyers’ liability to $7.5 million.

O. Hale Almand, an attorney for Gallion, said his client followed the advice and recommendations of well-known Cincinnati trial lawyer Stan Chesley, who negotiated the settlement. Almand also noted that the trial judge approved the attorneys fees.

Almand said the lawyers never intended to defraud their clients. The charitable trust was approved by an independent attorney who was hired by the court to write a legal opinion of it.

Cunningham’s lawyer was expected to make his opening statements at 1 p.m.

The trial could last six weeks.

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Jury selected for fen-phen trial

Herald-Leader Staff Report

A 12-person jury and four alternates were seated Tuesday in the second trial for two Central Kentucky attorneys accused of cheating their former clients out of $94 million.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Opening statements will begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Frankfort in the trial of disbarred lawyers Shirley Cunningham Jr. and William Gallion, who are charged with wire fraud and conspiracy. Statements are expected to last four hours.

Federal prosecutors said they expected to call as many as four former clients in the afternoon. Cunningham and Gallion are accused of taking settlement money that should have gone to 440 clients, who had sued the maker of the diet drug fen-phen for heart defects. The suit settled for $200 million in 2001.

The trial could last six weeks. The lawyers’ first trial, last July, resulted in a hung jury. Another defendant, Melbourne Mills, was acquitted.

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Two fen-phen lawyers disbarred

By Jim Warren
jwarren@herald-leader.com

Fen-phen lawyers William Gallion and Shirley Allen Cunningham Jr. have been permanently disbarred from legal practice by the Kentucky Supreme Court.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

The court entered orders Thursday afternoon disbarring both attorneys and, under terms of those orders, neither man can ever apply for reinstatement to the Kentucky Bar.

According to the orders, both Cunningham and Gallion had filed motions with the high court asking that they be disbarred.

And, under terms of the orders, both Gallion and Cunningham essentially admitted many of the ethical violations that federal prosecutors have alleged in an on-going case against them involving their handling of a $200-million fen-phen settlement.

Gallion, Cunningham and another attorney, Melborne Mills Jr., were tried on criminal mail fraud charges in federal court this summer. A federal jury at Covington acquitted Mills, but could not reach a verdict in the cases of Cunningham and Gallion.

They are scheduled for a retrial in federal court at Frankfort early next year.

Reach Jim Warren at 1-800-959-06397 Ext. 3255 or 859-231-3255

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Date set for fen-phen lawyers’ second trial

COVINGTON — Two Lexington-area lawyers accused of taking millions of dollars from their former clients in a diet drug settlement pleaded not guilty Thursday to eight new charges of wire fraud.

Last week, a federal grand jury indicted William Gallion and Shirley Cunningham Jr. on charges of conspiracy and eight new charges of wire fraud.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

The men were charged in 2007 with one count each of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

 

The two men were arraigned on the new charges Thursday morning in U.S. District Court.

Gallion signed paperwork for a $2.5 million property bond. He was released Thursday afternoon. Cunningham already had been released. Cunningham already had been released.

U.S. District Judge Danny Reeves set a trial date for Nov. 17.

A mistrial was declared in their first trial, in July, after a jury could not decide whether Gallion and Cunningham were guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Gallion, Cunningham and a third lawyer, Melbourne Mills Jr., were charged with one count each of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in 2007.

A jury acquitted Mills of all charges in July. Cunningham was released from the Boone County Jail on bond on Aug. 27.

The lawyers sued fen-phen maker American Home Products in Boone Circuit Court and settled the case for $200 million in 2001. Federal prosecutors say Gallion and Cunningham took $94 million — an increase of nearly $30 million from the previous indictment — that should have gone to 440 former clients, according to the indictment.

The indictment outlines a series of monetary transactions between Cunningham’s and Gallion’s bank accounts and accounts designated solely for client money.

If convicted, Gallion and Cunningham could face a maximum of 180 years in prison. However, it is rare for someone to get the maximum sentence.

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Bond reduced for two fen-phen attorneys

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

COVINGTON — A federal judge has reduced bond for two Lexington-area lawyers accused of pocketing millions of dollars that should have gone to their former clients in a diet-drug settlement.

Bond for William Gallion was set at $2.5 million, and Shirley Cunningham Jr.’s bond was set at $1.25 million.

The two men have been in the Boone County Jail awaiting their second criminal trial.

Gallion and Cunningham filed motions last month asking a federal judge to release them from jail so they can help their attorneys prepare for their second trial. Their first trial ended July 3 with a deadlocked jury.

Gallion argued in his earlier motion that he has little money for bond or to flee because his assets have been garnisheed by a civil lawsuit over his handling of a $200 million fen-phen class action lawsuit settlement.

Gallion and Cunningham also argued that they should be released from jail because the first jury couldn’t decide whether the two were guilty of conspiring to commit wire fraud. The jury foreman later said the vote was 10 to 2 to acquit the two men.

They are accused of taking millions of dollars that should have gone to 440 former clients in a 2001 fen-phen settlement in Boone Circuit Court. A third defendant, Lexington-area attorney Melbourne Mills Jr., was found not guilty by the same jury.

The two attorneys have been held at the Boone County Jail since August 2007.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld U.S. District Judge William Bertelsman’s decision to jail the two men and to set bond for Gallion at $52 million and for Cunningham at $45 million. Bertelsman declined the two men’s request to be released after was declared. But Bertelsman later stepped down from the case, and U.S. District Judge Danny Reeves was assigned to it.

In their motion, federal prosecutors point out that Bertelsman, who oversaw the six-week trial, said there was even more evidence and concern that the two men would flee.

On Friday, Reeves laid out several restrictions on travel. Gallion and Cunningham have to be subject to home detention, they’ll be subject to GPS monitoring and they will have to keep logs of visitors and telephone calls. Also, their computer usage will be monitored. Reeves said the men can give out gifts only up to $1,000 to make sure they’re not liquidating or hiding assets. The judge also said he might appoint someone to monitor their business assets.

Reeves said if they violate any condition of the bond it will be forfeited.

Attorneys for both men said they did not know whether their clients would be able to post bond.

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