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Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
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Artifice Offline
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Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
Quote:Jamie Leigh Jones was a 20-year-old Halliburton employee in 2005 when she was sent to work in Iraq. She'd been there just four days when she joined a small group of Halliburton firefighters outside her barracks at the end of the day. One of them gave her a drink. She took two sips, and Jones says that was the last thing she remembered.

"I woke up inside the barracks," she says. "It was actually inside my barrack room, and that's when I noticed I had been severely beaten and was actually naked."

Jones had been raped, repeatedly. By how many men, she's not sure. But she says one man was still naked and asleep in the room when she came to.

"Apparently, he knew he was beyond the reach of any jurisdiction, so he was still brazen enough to be there," she says.

Jones was escorted by security to the company clinic for a rape examination. When the rape kit examination was done, the evidence was turned over to Halliburton security.

The young woman's breasts were so badly mauled that she is permanently disfigured. It has been four years since the attack, and despite the physical and circumstantial evidence, the Department of Justice has declined to investigate.

Seeking Justice Through a Suit

Justice Department officials refused to explain or comment in any way to NPR about the case. Jones has decided that if she can't have her day in criminal court, she'll sue Halliburton and its former subsidiary, KBR, in civil court.

"I want corporate accountability," she says. "I was so brutalized that I'm going to have to remember this the rest of my life. And Halliburton was so uncompassionate that they even let the men work there, still, after I went home."

Heather Browne, director of communications at KBR, says that while the company can't speak to the facts since the case is ongoing, it denies any liability in the attack. And she argues that any dispute with Jones, even one involving charges of rape, must go to arbitration.

So Jones is now going to court seeking the right to sue. She has become one of the nation's leading arbitration reform advocates.

An Arbitration Culture

If Jones' case is remarkable, the fact that arbitration is involved is not. In the past 20 years it has become a dominant feature in the legal relationship between American corporations, their employees and their customers.

If you use credit cards, have a cell phone contract, bought a house from a builder or put your mother or father in a nursing home, you have very likely signed away your right to be heard in court if there's a problem. It's called pre-dispute mandatory binding arbitration.

Public Citizen's David Arkush, one of the country's leading researchers on arbitration, says many consumers have no clue as to the rights they're signing away.

"In the fine print of those contracts is a provision that says that they can never sue the company if they have a dispute," Arkush says." Instead they have to go a private, secret tribunal chosen by the company."

A Losing Record For Consumers

Arbitration is a closed, private process, often with little or no written record. But one state, California, changed its law to require that arbitration results be publicly recorded. Public Citizen staff reviewed 34,000 California cases, and Arkush says the results speak volumes.

"Overall, consumers lost 94 percent of the time," he says.

The arbitration industry disputes that number. But it does not disagree that corporations win more of the time. The disagreement is about whether this is evidence of bias or a reflection that corporations bring stronger cases.

Mike Kelly, spokesman for the National Arbitration Forum — one of the country's largest arbitration firms — says it's the latter.

"You're not going to bring a case that you're going to lose," he says. "Frankly, you're not going to bring a case that you think you have a chance to lose."

Kelly says the results would still be lopsided if these same cases went to court instead of arbitration. And Kelly says his arbitrators, which the NAF calls neutrals, are men and women without bias.

"What you're really doing is taking a shot at all those individual neutrals who are handling these cases," he says.

Rulings And Consequences

Elizabeth Bartholet was one of the NAF's arbitrators for a time. She's a law professor at Harvard and for two decades has moonlighted as a part-time arbitrator. The first 19 cases she arbitrated for the National Arbitration Forum were all credit card cases. She ruled each time for the credit card company.

Then, on the 20th case, she ruled for the consumer. After reviewing the evidence, Bartholet awarded the cardholder $48,000. And with that, her career as an NAF arbitrator was effectively over. She says she was stricken from her remaining cases.

"I called the NAF and spoke to the case manager, and she agreed the reason I was being removed was because I had ruled in this one case against the credit card company," Bartholet says.

The NAF says nothing improper was done, that companies and consumers alike are allowed to strike an arbitrator from a case. Bartholet counters that arbitrators know full well that if they rule against corporations too often, their income will dry up.

"NAF arbitrators are given a form where every line is filled out in terms of the amount it is suggested that you rule," she says. "And so all you need to do is fill in to the right [of that line] the exact same number. And then at the bottom, you total it up and they give the attorneys' fees number. And there's no indication that you should even write a one-sentence opinion."

Bartholet says nowadays, she will arbitrate only when both parties are roughly equal in power and enter into arbitration voluntarily.

Push For Reform

The Arbitration Fairness Act now before Congress would ban clauses that make arbitration mandatory for the resolution of disputes — restoring to consumers and employees the choice of taking their case to court.

Lisa Rickard, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform, says that making arbitration voluntary will lead to its extinction.

She also says it will clog the courts with needless litigation. "It really is human nature," she says. "When people have an argument, they really want to fight it out. And the best place to fight it out is in court."
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story...=105153315

NPR left out that the rape kit "disappeared" after it was turned over to Halliburton security.
(This post was last modified: 06-14-2009 06:35 PM by Artifice.)
06-14-2009 06:34 PM
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RobertN Offline
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Post: #2
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 06:34 PM)Artifice Wrote:  
Quote:Jamie Leigh Jones was a 20-year-old Halliburton employee in 2005 when she was sent to work in Iraq. She'd been there just four days when she joined a small group of Halliburton firefighters outside her barracks at the end of the day. One of them gave her a drink. She took two sips, and Jones says that was the last thing she remembered.

"I woke up inside the barracks," she says. "It was actually inside my barrack room, and that's when I noticed I had been severely beaten and was actually naked."

Jones had been raped, repeatedly. By how many men, she's not sure. But she says one man was still naked and asleep in the room when she came to.

"Apparently, he knew he was beyond the reach of any jurisdiction, so he was still brazen enough to be there," she says.

Jones was escorted by security to the company clinic for a rape examination. When the rape kit examination was done, the evidence was turned over to Halliburton security.

The young woman's breasts were so badly mauled that she is permanently disfigured. It has been four years since the attack, and despite the physical and circumstantial evidence, the Department of Justice has declined to investigate.

Seeking Justice Through a Suit

Justice Department officials refused to explain or comment in any way to NPR about the case. Jones has decided that if she can't have her day in criminal court, she'll sue Halliburton and its former subsidiary, KBR, in civil court.

"I want corporate accountability," she says. "I was so brutalized that I'm going to have to remember this the rest of my life. And Halliburton was so uncompassionate that they even let the men work there, still, after I went home."

Heather Browne, director of communications at KBR, says that while the company can't speak to the facts since the case is ongoing, it denies any liability in the attack. And she argues that any dispute with Jones, even one involving charges of rape, must go to arbitration.

So Jones is now going to court seeking the right to sue. She has become one of the nation's leading arbitration reform advocates.

An Arbitration Culture

If Jones' case is remarkable, the fact that arbitration is involved is not. In the past 20 years it has become a dominant feature in the legal relationship between American corporations, their employees and their customers.

If you use credit cards, have a cell phone contract, bought a house from a builder or put your mother or father in a nursing home, you have very likely signed away your right to be heard in court if there's a problem. It's called pre-dispute mandatory binding arbitration.

Public Citizen's David Arkush, one of the country's leading researchers on arbitration, says many consumers have no clue as to the rights they're signing away.

"In the fine print of those contracts is a provision that says that they can never sue the company if they have a dispute," Arkush says." Instead they have to go a private, secret tribunal chosen by the company."

A Losing Record For Consumers

Arbitration is a closed, private process, often with little or no written record. But one state, California, changed its law to require that arbitration results be publicly recorded. Public Citizen staff reviewed 34,000 California cases, and Arkush says the results speak volumes.

"Overall, consumers lost 94 percent of the time," he says.

The arbitration industry disputes that number. But it does not disagree that corporations win more of the time. The disagreement is about whether this is evidence of bias or a reflection that corporations bring stronger cases.

Mike Kelly, spokesman for the National Arbitration Forum — one of the country's largest arbitration firms — says it's the latter.

"You're not going to bring a case that you're going to lose," he says. "Frankly, you're not going to bring a case that you think you have a chance to lose."

Kelly says the results would still be lopsided if these same cases went to court instead of arbitration. And Kelly says his arbitrators, which the NAF calls neutrals, are men and women without bias.

"What you're really doing is taking a shot at all those individual neutrals who are handling these cases," he says.

Rulings And Consequences

Elizabeth Bartholet was one of the NAF's arbitrators for a time. She's a law professor at Harvard and for two decades has moonlighted as a part-time arbitrator. The first 19 cases she arbitrated for the National Arbitration Forum were all credit card cases. She ruled each time for the credit card company.

Then, on the 20th case, she ruled for the consumer. After reviewing the evidence, Bartholet awarded the cardholder $48,000. And with that, her career as an NAF arbitrator was effectively over. She says she was stricken from her remaining cases.

"I called the NAF and spoke to the case manager, and she agreed the reason I was being removed was because I had ruled in this one case against the credit card company," Bartholet says.

The NAF says nothing improper was done, that companies and consumers alike are allowed to strike an arbitrator from a case. Bartholet counters that arbitrators know full well that if they rule against corporations too often, their income will dry up.

"NAF arbitrators are given a form where every line is filled out in terms of the amount it is suggested that you rule," she says. "And so all you need to do is fill in to the right [of that line] the exact same number. And then at the bottom, you total it up and they give the attorneys' fees number. And there's no indication that you should even write a one-sentence opinion."

Bartholet says nowadays, she will arbitrate only when both parties are roughly equal in power and enter into arbitration voluntarily.

Push For Reform

The Arbitration Fairness Act now before Congress would ban clauses that make arbitration mandatory for the resolution of disputes — restoring to consumers and employees the choice of taking their case to court.

Lisa Rickard, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform, says that making arbitration voluntary will lead to its extinction.

She also says it will clog the courts with needless litigation. "It really is human nature," she says. "When people have an argument, they really want to fight it out. And the best place to fight it out is in court."
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story...=105153315

NPR left out that the rape kit "disappeared" after it was turned over to Halliburton security.
I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot
06-14-2009 07:09 PM
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DrTorch Offline
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Post: #3
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
06-14-2009 07:20 PM
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smn1256 Offline
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Post: #4
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
Foriegn terrorists in foriegn countries get US Constitutional rights read to them and this woman can't even get a crumb. If she knew where to go she'd find there's other kinds of justice in this world, the kind that doesn't involve police or the legal system.
06-14-2009 07:51 PM
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RobertN Offline
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Post: #5
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.
06-14-2009 07:58 PM
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smn1256 Offline
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Post: #6
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
06-14-2009 08:02 PM
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RobertN Offline
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Post: #7
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 08:02 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
Yes. I do think Bush and Cheney got involved covering up crimes by Halliburton and KBR. The companies keep getting bloated contracts and the republican(and some democrats) recieve more $$$.
06-14-2009 09:21 PM
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smn1256 Offline
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Post: #8
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 09:21 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 08:02 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
Yes. I do think Bush and Cheney got involved covering up crimes by Halliburton and KBR. The companies keep getting bloated contracts and the republican(and some democrats) recieve more $$$.


There's too much at stake. They'd lose their legacy.
06-14-2009 10:17 PM
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RobertN Offline
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Post: #9
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 10:17 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 09:21 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 08:02 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
Yes. I do think Bush and Cheney got involved covering up crimes by Halliburton and KBR. The companies keep getting bloated contracts and the republican(and some democrats) recieve more $$$.


There's too much at stake. They'd lose their legacy.
No. I think it would fit right in with their lagacy.
06-14-2009 11:53 PM
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DrTorch Offline
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Post: #10
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-14-2009 09:21 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 08:02 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
Yes. I do think Bush and Cheney got involved covering up crimes by Halliburton and KBR.

No you don't, b/c you're unable to think. You're a mindless drone, who simply hates.

I'm surprised you didn't call this woman a "slut" like you did Palin's daughter.
06-15-2009 07:21 AM
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Ninerfan1 Offline
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Post: #11
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
(06-15-2009 07:21 AM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 09:21 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 08:02 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:58 PM)RobertN Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:20 PM)DrTorch Wrote:  
(06-14-2009 07:09 PM)RobertN Wrote:  I think they should look for the rape kit in Cheney's "undisclosed location". 05-stirthepot

Some of us find such stories disgusting. Others make jokes.

Would it be even funnier if she was 14, Robert?
I find it disgusting too. I also find it disgusting that the last administration kept letting Halliburton and KBR get away with murder(and/or rape) for years. THis happened in '05. It is now '09. Where were Bush and Cheney in those years? Hiding the truth.

Do you really think Buch/Cheney got involved with covering up crimes committed by Halliburton or KBR? What's the up side for them? The downside is impeachment and criminal prosecution.

That's the kind of **** that brought Nixon down.
Yes. I do think Bush and Cheney got involved covering up crimes by Halliburton and KBR.

No you don't, b/c you're unable to think. You're a mindless drone, who simply hates.

I'm surprised you didn't call this woman a "slut" like you did Palin's daughter.

This.

All I would add is that Robert is clearly not just a moron but scum to boot. He'll believe the worst about anyone just because they have an R next to their name.

You are what's wrong with this country Robert. I think now is the time for you to blow youself up for your bretheren. Just take them with you instead of us.

Regarding this cover up, it's pathetic. Companies should not be allowed to dismiss these kinds of things simply because the occur overseas.
(This post was last modified: 06-15-2009 07:34 AM by Ninerfan1.)
06-15-2009 07:32 AM
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Post: #12
RE: Halliburton Rape Case Highlights Arbitration
The National Arbitration Forum is a bunch of scumbags. On credit card cases the paperwork submittted by the debt buyer/collection agency isn't even admissible under the rules of evidence. Hearsay, no authentication or even a business records affidavit.

In Texas the State District Court Judges wouldn't issue a Judgment confirming the arbitration award after they saw the paperwork.

So the Debt Buyers/Collection Agencies now go to Justice of the Peace Courts (where the Judge isn't a lawyer), the rules of evidence don't apply and 3/4 of the time the Defendant doesn't show up in Court.
06-15-2009 07:42 AM
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