The Blame Game cover art

The Blame Game

The Blame Game

Written by: Jonathan R. Ratchik
Listen for free

LIMITED TIME OFFER | Get 2 Months for ₹5/month

About this listen

Accidents are an unavoidable fact of life. Or are they? This podcast discusses current events through a personal injury lawyer’s perspective. In each episode, your host, Jonathan R. Ratchik Esq, will focus on one such event and attempt to answer one oftentimes not-so-simple question: “Who’s to blame?”© 2023 The Blame Game Politics & Government Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Putting the POW back in Powder
    Mar 28 2023

    On February 26, 2016, Terry Sanderson, an optometrist in his late 60s and an experienced skier, was skiing at Deer Valley Resort in Utah when he claims his life changed forever after Gwyneth Paltrow, an Academy Award-winning actress, crashed into him.  In the personal injury lawsuit he filed against Ms. Paltrow and the Deer Valley Resort Company (and which is on trial at the time of this broadcast), Mr. Sanderson is claiming to have suffered a traumatic brain injury, multiple broken ribs and economic loss as a result of the crash.
    In this episode of The Blame Game, we try to answer the question of who, if anyone, is to blame for this skiing collision?  Is Ms. Paltrow legally responsible for the harm that Mr. Sanderson claims to have suffered as a result of her negligence?  And what about Deer Valley’s employees – do they bear any responsibility for what happened to Mr. Sanderson and his resulting injuries? 

    Thanks for listening to The Blame Game! Follow us on Apple Podcasts, Audacy, and Facebook.

    Show More Show Less
    6 mins
  • Man's Best Friend?
    Oct 31 2022

    On October 2, 2022, a 13-year-old girl was walking home from school on Staten Island when she was suddenly and viciously attacked by a group of pit bulls which had escaped from an open window in their owners’ home.  The pit bulls also attacked a 2-year-old girl and a 19-year-old woman.  

    Sadly, these types of attacks are not isolated incidents, either in New York City or elsewhere.  According to the insurance industry, there were almost 18,000 dog-bite claims filed in the United States in 2021, a small fraction of the 4.5 million dog bites that occur each year.  Between 2005 and 2020, dogs killed over 560 Americans, more than two-thirds of which were caused by pit bulls.  

    In this episode of The Blame Game, we try to answer the question of, Who’s to Blame for these tragic events which can leave its victims with physical and emotional scars for life and are oftentimes fatal for the dog itself?  Who bears legal responsibility when a dog bites and injures someone?

    Thanks for listening to The Blame Game! Follow us on Apple Podcasts, Audacy, and Facebook.

    Show More Show Less
    5 mins
  • Supermarket Slaughter
    Jun 7 2022

    On the afternoon of May 14th, Payton Gendron, eighteen years old and a self-proclaimed white supremacist, arrived outside a Tops Supermarket located in Buffalo, New York.  Armed with an AR-15 type rifle, Gendron began firing off rounds in the parking lot, fatally shooting three shoppers.  He then entered the grocery store where his killing spree continued.  When all was said and done, Gendron had murdered 10 people and injured three others.  Almost all of the victims were African-American.

    Perhaps not surprisingly, Gendron had purchased the assault rifle legally from dealers in New York and northern Pennsylvania.  Background checks came back negative.  Although he had undergone a psychiatric evaluation in 2021 after submitting a high school project in which he threatened to commit a murder-suicide at a high school, his actions did not trigger New York’s Red-Flag law which prevents anyone who shows signs of being a threat to themselves or others from purchasing a firearm. 

     In this Episode of The Blame Game, we try to answer the question of, who, if anyone, is to blame for this shooting and the resulting tragic loss of life?  Who, if anyone, is legally responsible for the murders that were committed inside the Tops supermarket? And to help us answer these questions, we turn to the Dunleavy in Kramer, Dunleavy & Ratchik, Denise Dunleavy.  In 1999, Ms. Dunleavy received the Trial Lawyer of the Year award from Trial Lawyers for Public Justice for her work against the gun industry.  In her precedent-setting victory in Hamilton v. Accu-Tek, she convinced a jury to hold gun manufacturers liable for negligently marketing and distributing handguns in the New York City area.

    Thanks for listening to The Blame Game! Follow us on Apple Podcasts, Audacy, and Facebook.

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
No reviews yet