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CASE STUDIES

Since 1990, numerous Canadians have recovered huge settlements for their automobile accidents in the United States, especially in California, Arizona, and Florida.

In 1991, an AMTRAK train carrying hundred of passengers from Canada and the United States travelled close to 100 mph in a 30 mph curve and demolished a house before turning on its side. Mr. Parks tried the cases in federal court in Florida and won.

In 1994 a silicone tubing product made in Germany, England, and the United States was in a women's vein and became stuck inside her heart after it travelled inside her body.

In April of 2006, a prominent northeastern United States university settled the last of a series of medical negligence claims on a laboratory mistake in a university hospital that had devastating affects on families in Canada and the United States. The families were represented exclusively by Scott Parks and resolved their claim by a large cash settlement. The claims were negligent genetic testing and were for wrongful birth.

In 2008, a settlement was reached for a Arizona accident in the death of a Canadian women killed by a negligent product on a motor vehicle.

Most recently, a United States investor retained the firm to recover after $12 million was invested worldwide into a British scheme using the British Virgin Islands as the incorporation site to defraud the investors in England.