Attorney Nick Rowley Comments On $127 Million Verdict Awarded to Sexual Assault Victim

Attorney Nick Rowley Comments On $127 Million Verdict Awarded to Sexual Assault Victim

DES MOINES, March 7, 2017/PRNewswire/—Attorney Nick Rowley of Trial Lawyers for Justice recently commented on the $127 million verdict awarded to a child who was a victim of sexual assault and her family. James Hohenshell was found guilty of lascivious acts with a child and supplying alcohol to a minor back in 2014 and sentenced to five years in prison. The 13-year-old victim and her family filed a lawsuit against Hohenshell for the pain and suffering and loss of affection caused by the sexual assault.

“James Hohenshell encountered the victim when she came to his home to attend a sleepover with friends, one of whom happened to be Hohenshell’s child,” Rowley says. “Instead of acting as a responsible adult and parent, Hohenshell supplied the children with alcohol before sexually assaulting the victim.”

“No parent ever expects their child to be sexually assaulted during an innocent sleepover with friends,” Rowley states. “What happened to this girl and her family is every parent’s worst nightmare.”

“I applaud the young lady who had the courage to file a lawsuit against her assailant to hold him responsible for the pain she and her family have suffered,” Rowley continues.

“The jury sent a strong message to the public with this verdict,” Rowley says. “And that message is if you physically or emotionally harm children in any way, you will be forced to pay in both criminal and civil court.”

He’s Won More Than $1 Billion For Underdogs Everywhere

He’s Won More Than $1 Billion For Underdogs Everywhere

The plane was on the ground for all of 10 minutes. “I’m Aria,” the pilot said, welcoming his passenger aboard the turbocharged aircraft whose glass cockpit was outfitted with digital displays presumably reverse-engineered using captured Batplane technology.

Aria — whose last name wouldn’t be revealed until the flight back to the Jefferson Municipal Airport — had been dispatched by his employer to retrieve me, and me alone, on this cold February morning. If he should lose consciousness for some reason at any point during the trip, Aria casually explained, I was to pull the red lever above us to activate the airframe parachute system. And with that, we were en route to his boss, a charismatic millionaire 20 times over whose empire, constructed atop human pain and suffering, took less than 15 years to build. Aria was surely taking me to visit a guy who inhabited some kind of secret volcano lair on an uncharted island. Come to find out, Aria’s employer actually inhabits two islands — one in Oceania and one in the Mediterranean.

But Aria’s boss is no evil super-villain. He’s one step up: A personal injury lawyer. Nevertheless, the origin stories bear a striking similarity — here was a fast-talking kid with an unstable upbringing who wound up being expelled from virtually every school he attended. When he finally left his quaint Midwestern town — in this origin story, the town just happens to be Jefferson — he left angry, and in possession of the kind of intellect that all but guaranteed he would be able to build something from nothing. Whether that something would be for good or evil, however, was anybody’s guess.

And now as Aria piloted the Cirrus SR22T toward a wooded river valley below, it would all become clear. With its micro-breweries, bed and breakfasts, organic food co-op and that eagle nest with a webcam on it, Decorah (pop. 8,127) is about as close to Sherwood Forest as you’ll find in Iowa. Attorney Nick Rowley, who has accumulated a personal net worth of $20 million since he left Jefferson as a troubled teen of 17, has become Robin Hood. Bounding from his black Hummer H1 at Decorah’s municipal airport, Rowley greeted Aria with the kind of massive embrace Robin of Locksley might have once upon a time reserved for Little John. “You know that plane has a parachute,” Rowley, 39, informed his guest.

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Attorneys Nick and Courtney Rowley Comment on the Theft of Pain Medication at Iowa Methodist Medical Center

Attorneys Nick and Courtney Rowley Comment on the Theft of Pain Medication at Iowa Methodist Medical Center

DES MOINES, Iowa, Feb. 10, 2017  — Attorneys Nick and Courtney Rowley of Trial Lawyers for Justice recently spoke about a high profile case regarding pain medication theft at Iowa Methodist Medical Center.

Between August and October of 2016, a pharmacy technician employed by the hospital was using a syringe to withdraw pain medication and replace it with saline. Nick and Courtney Rowley, along with attorney Andrew Hope of Hope Law Firm, represent nine patients who were treated with diluted pain medication.

“These patients were denied the medication they needed to remain comfortable while receiving medical treatment,” Nick Rowley says. “To make matters worse, patients who were given diluted pain medication will now need to be tested for infectious diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C because the pharmacy technician used dirty needles during the theft.”

“The hospital failed to properly supervise the pharmacy technician for a period of six weeks,” Rowley continues. “The theft of painkillers at Iowa Methodist Medical Center is much more than the negligence of a single employee—it represents a complete institutional failure.

Currently, we represent over 200 patients who were given diluted pain medication and have filed the first set of lawsuits, but there could be more victims out there. In fact, the hospital contacted over 700 patients who may have been affected immediately after they discovered the theft.

“We encourage anyone who stayed in the hospital during this time period to contact us as soon as possible,” Courtney Rowley says. “Together, we can hold the responsible parties accountable for their negligence.”

With offices in Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois, and California, and serving the entire nation, Trial Lawyers for Justice specialize in personal injury law. Trial Lawyers for Justice is dedicated to helping clients recover the compensation they deserve for their injuries.