Jack Bailey

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We have successfully helped numerous clients obtain the fair settlements they deserve, and we are here to do the same for you.

Biography

Jack Bailey was recently acknowledged as SuperLawyer Selectee 2018. Jack Bailey has been fighting for hurt workers and victims of negligence since 1977.  His practice is solely prosecution and trial of personal injury, medical malpractice and workers’ compensation cases for people.  Jack has been inducted as a Fellow to the ABA’s College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers, Super Lawyer List by Louisiana Life and voted by local peers in SB Magazine Annual “Top Attorney” edition year after year.  He holds an impressive resume of successful case settlements, including the $591,000,000.00 jury verdict against Phillip Morris USA, Brown & Williamson, Lorrillard, R.J. Reynolds and the Tobacco Institute in Scott, et al v. The American Tobacco Company, et al where Jack was a Trial Team Captain. Jack has built a reputation as a trial lawyer who genuinely cares about his clients.

He was born in Shreveport, Louisiana and he and his family live and work in the local community. He and his family have a vested interest in his good standing with the citizens of Northwest Louisiana.

With local perspective, Jack Bailey and his team approach every case with personal attention, detailed aggression and a strategy to win. Each case represents an opportunity to be the voice for victims of injury and a path to justice. He has been responsible for the prosecution of cases in other states such as Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Montana, California and others.

He takes client representation to a level that is difficult to find or duplicate and he is one of the few trial lawyers who focuses on the medical well-being and the quality of life of his clients.

Jack Bailey is a Personal Injury & Workers’ Compensation Specialists, which means you are hiring a highly experienced lawyer knowledgeable in navigating the intricacies of how these cases work together in the law.

Associations

  • Counselor, Council of Directors, Executive Committee and Lifetime Member of the Louisiana Association for Justice (LAJ), formerly the Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association (LTLA)
  • Northwest Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association (President – 1990)
  • Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association – Lifetime Member (Board of Directors – 1986-1989 and 1998-2007, Council of Directors, Section Member in Medical Malpractice, Auto Torts/Highway Defects, Worker’s Compensation,Chairman of Louisiana Workers’ Compensation Section (2005)).
  • The Association of Trial Lawyers of America (Sustaining Member); Section Member in Products Liability, Professional Negligence, Birth Trauma Litigation Group, Insurance Litigation, Motor Vehicle Collision; Certified Instructor: Trial Tactics ATLA
  • Southern Trial Lawyers Association
  • Shreveport Bar Association (Speaker Committee, 1993; Chairman – Ethics Committee, 1993; Program Chairman, 2001)
  • Member of American Bar Association
  • Louisiana State Bar Association (Executive Council, Sections on Insurance, Negligence, Admiralty, 1983-1985)
  • Member of Roscoe Pound Foundation
  • Member of Center for Justice and Democracy
  • Member of Public Citizen
  • Trial Lawyers for Public Justice (TLPJ)
  • The Civil Justice Foundation
  • The Workplace Injury Litigation Group
  • Scott, et al vs. The American Tobacco Company, et al – Case Details
  • The College of Workers’ Compensation Lawyers

Experience

Award was given to a 56-firm consortium known as the Castano Group, which taking on the role of a private attorney general under California law, sued the tobacco industry and helped to win $25 million for the state.

A judgment of approximately $591 million which created a “court supervised smoking cessation program”.

Phase I was completed 2 years after jury selection began on June 18, 2001 and Phase II was completed 2 months after it began on March 31, 2004

Mr. Bailey and Mr. John Shub took the first deposition in which a tobacco executive or industry scientist admitted cigarettes cause cancer and are addictive. This deposition was of Jerry Whidby, Ph.D., Philip Morris’ Chief Scientist, taken in Richmond, VA in 2001.

In a 2001 deposition of John Campbell, President and CEO of Phillip Morris USA, Mr. Bailey and Paul Boncome of New Orleans obtained an admission that not only did Mr. Campbell not want his children to smoke, he taught his children not to smoke. This deposition also contained the first admission from an industry executive that his company’s product addicted and killed. Campbell admitted that his company’s product, when used as designed and intended by his customers, addicted and caused the death of his customers.

One of Mr. Bailey’s assignments in Scott was to examine Dr. DeNoble during mock trials and to prepare him for cross-examination by the Tobacco Lawyers. The Tobacco Companies had 5 lawyers prepared to cross Dr. DeNoble. After lunch, Mr. Gay, counsel for Philip Morris, stated, “my colleagues have prevailed me not to ask any more questions of Dr. DeNoble.”

Scott was the first court case where Dr. DeNoble testified about his experience as a Scientist in the cigarette industry. His testimony was one of the highlights of the plaintiff’s case.