Aaron Siri
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When it comes, for example, to the Department of Transportation that assures, that has to promote transportation, they separate that from the NTSB that assures safety or the Department of Energy that promotes nuclear power plants. They separate that from the regulatory function of promoting, assuring the safety of nuclear power plants.
When it comes to vaccines, the product we inject into adults and often into children which all have immunity, by the way, not just the ones, not just COVID vaccines, all vaccines are national childhood vaccine drug 1986. Regulators are hopelessly conflicted because they serve that dual role. And they're the entity that you do bring a claim if you have one against.
When it comes to vaccines, the product we inject into adults and often into children which all have immunity, by the way, not just the ones, not just COVID vaccines, all vaccines are national childhood vaccine drug 1986. Regulators are hopelessly conflicted because they serve that dual role. And they're the entity that you do bring a claim if you have one against.
And so if they do any safety studies that show the vaccine causes any issues, lawyers will use it against the government to establish liability in the CICP for COVID vaccine. And it's something called the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program for almost all other vaccines.
And so if they do any safety studies that show the vaccine causes any issues, lawyers will use it against the government to establish liability in the CICP for COVID vaccine. And it's something called the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program for almost all other vaccines.
Well, I would love to bring a class to action on behalf of everybody that's been injured by a COVID-19 vaccine. We should have those against Pfizer, against Moderna, against J&J, against AstraZeneca for everybody injured because that's the way it's supposed to work. But you can't because of the PrEP-backed immunity. I can't bring that suit. Bree is in a unique situation.
Well, I would love to bring a class to action on behalf of everybody that's been injured by a COVID-19 vaccine. We should have those against Pfizer, against Moderna, against J&J, against AstraZeneca for everybody injured because that's the way it's supposed to work. But you can't because of the PrEP-backed immunity. I can't bring that suit. Bree is in a unique situation.
Because she was in a clinical trial and AstraZeneca and her signed an agreement, a written agreement in which they promised certain things to her, like to pay her medical expenses and so forth, and didn't uphold that, I can bring a claim against them for breach of contract.
Because she was in a clinical trial and AstraZeneca and her signed an agreement, a written agreement in which they promised certain things to her, like to pay her medical expenses and so forth, and didn't uphold that, I can bring a claim against them for breach of contract.
normally what you do when you have injured byproduct is you bring a claim for something called the design defect claim you say well you could have made the product safer or failure to warrant claims right but those claim the prep act provides immunity for so unfortunately at the moment i will say we do have two lawsuits pending right now in which we are seeking to strike down the prep act immunity is unconstitutional
normally what you do when you have injured byproduct is you bring a claim for something called the design defect claim you say well you could have made the product safer or failure to warrant claims right but those claim the prep act provides immunity for so unfortunately at the moment i will say we do have two lawsuits pending right now in which we are seeking to strike down the prep act immunity is unconstitutional
That's one way that class action lawsuits could potentially happen, assuming that after, if that occurs, that Congress doesn't then put the COVID vaccine injuries into the vaccine injury compensation program, which was a program set up as a result of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. I can explain what that is if you'd like in about one or two minutes.
That's one way that class action lawsuits could potentially happen, assuming that after, if that occurs, that Congress doesn't then put the COVID vaccine injuries into the vaccine injury compensation program, which was a program set up as a result of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. I can explain what that is if you'd like in about one or two minutes.
I'll give you the answer to that. Because Brie is a good person. She's a good person. And she kept trying to work with them. engage with them, have them, give them every single opportunity to do the right thing. Frankly, she went above and beyond what I think most folks would have done in terms of being patient, reasonable, and just, you know, she's just a good person.
I'll give you the answer to that. Because Brie is a good person. She's a good person. And she kept trying to work with them. engage with them, have them, give them every single opportunity to do the right thing. Frankly, she went above and beyond what I think most folks would have done in terms of being patient, reasonable, and just, you know, she's just a good person.
And so, you know, that process played itself out over a period of time. And eventually, when they would not agree to do the right thing, we brought a federal lawsuit.
And so, you know, that process played itself out over a period of time. And eventually, when they would not agree to do the right thing, we brought a federal lawsuit.
It's Siri L-O-P dot com.
It's Siri L-O-P dot com.
Well, the way that I, you know, we've got 40 folks at our firm that just do vaccine-related work. I believe we have the largest vaccine practice in the world that doesn't represent pharmaceutical companies. 15 of those folks do vaccine injury claims. We don't sue pharmaceutical companies typically. We just sue in that program.