A Brooklyn federal judge slammed the use of statistics showing racial differences in life expectancy to determine damages for a catastrophically injured black man. The man was rendered a quadriplegic in the 2003 crash of the New York City-operated Staten Island Ferry. Last month, the judge awarded the man damages of $18.3 million. The city had sought to limit his damages on a number of grounds, arguing that his past criminal records as much as his race indicated a shorter life expectancy. The judge held that the consideration of statistical differences in life expectancy among races in determining damages would be discriminatory and unconstitutional. http://www.foleygriffin.com/
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