by Andrew Vines
Mayflower oil-spill attorneys note the one-year
anniversary of the March 29, 2013 rupture of the ExxonMobil
Pegasus Pipeline with a renewed call for affected residents to seek
legal counsel. As previously reported here,
lawsuits have been filed against Exxon for compensation on behalf of
residents impacted by the spill, and it is still not too late for
others to join the pending legal action.
From the beginning, attorneys have
advised caution in dealing with Exxon without legal
representation, and a recent article
from the Arkansas Times demonstrates why that advice is even more
important today than in the initial weeks following the spill. The
article reports on one affected resident’s experience with the
Exxon claims process as follows:
The friendly claims people she’d dealt with at first had left town, replaced by a hardball negotiator — “a killer,” said [the resident] — who pressured the remaining families to accept the deals as offered.
I had no problem with Exxon this entire time. Things got rough in about July, August, and that’s when it all went downhill,” [the resident] said. “It went from me really thinking they cared and were sorry and were going to make it right to they were going to screw us any way they could and they really didn’t care.
…
The claims negotiator, she said, continued to lean heavily on all the families remaining.
…
There was no negotiating. We were told ‘Take it or leave it, but this is the best you will ever get.’ They will continue to file appeal after appeal and draw it out as long as they can, and you will end up with nothing in the end. The scare tactics were not only to me. It caused most of the others to just settle and be done, because they were already moving on to their new homes.
It was a tactic of bullying. Basically, we’ll bully you until you break and you either sell to us or you settle with us, and I wouldn’t do either. MORE
anniversary
of the March 29, 2013 rupture of the ExxonMobil Pegasus Pipeline with a
renewed call for affected residents to seek legal counsel. As
previously reported here,
lawsuits have been filed against Exxon for compensation on behalf of
residents impacted by the spill, and it is still not too late for others
to join the pending legal action.
From the beginning, attorneys have advised caution in dealing with Exxon without legal representation, and a recent article from the Arkansas Times demonstrates why that advice is even more important today than in the initial weeks following the spill. The article reports on one affected resident’s experience with the Exxon claims process as follows:
From the beginning, attorneys have advised caution in dealing with Exxon without legal representation, and a recent article from the Arkansas Times demonstrates why that advice is even more important today than in the initial weeks following the spill. The article reports on one affected resident’s experience with the Exxon claims process as follows:
The friendly claims people she’d dealt with at first had left town, replaced by a hardball negotiator — “a killer,” said [the resident] — who pressured the remaining families to accept the deals as offered.- See more at: http://attorney-group.com/arkansas/mayflower-oil-spill-anniversary/#sthash.zcGPALHA.dpuf
I had no problem with Exxon this entire time. Things got rough in about July, August, and that’s when it all went downhill,” [the resident] said. “It went from me really thinking they cared and were sorry and were going to make it right to they were going to screw us any way they could and they really didn’t care.
…
The claims negotiator, she said, continued to lean heavily on all the families remaining.
…
There was no negotiating. We were told ‘Take it or leave it, but this is the best you will ever get.’ They will continue to file appeal after appeal and draw it out as long as they can, and you will end up with nothing in the end. The scare tactics were not only to me. It caused most of the others to just settle and be done, because they were already moving on to their new homes.
It was a tactic of bullying. Basically, we’ll bully you until you break and you either sell to us or you settle with us, and I wouldn’t do either.
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