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A self-centered, big-city, corporate lawyer finds himself between a rock and hard place when assigned to represent a multi-billionaire client set on ruthless exploitation of his hometown.
I'm taking a wild guess that you are one of those heretics who don't genuflect before the altar of the limited liability corporation. Neither do I. That said, in the current environmental regulatory and legal environment, I find the premise improbable: that is, that the CEO thinks he can foist the cRead more
I’m taking a wild guess that you are one of those heretics who don’t genuflect before the altar of the limited liability corporation.
Neither do I.
That said, in the current environmental regulatory and legal environment, I find the premise improbable: that is, that the CEO thinks he can foist the contamination on the town and evade clean up costs, now and in the future. If he knows he is donating a toxic time bomb that will inevitably detonate, then he would surely know his corporate ass will be hauled into court to pay cleanup costs.
Further, he would know that the company will get bitch-slapped with punitive costs in court that (combined with the clean up costs) could drive his company (and himself) into bankruptcy. So the bottom line –and CEO’s genuflect before the bottom line — is that it would be cheaper to acknowledge and pay for the cleanup.
Now if the CEO thinks he can actually get away with dumping the toxic dump on the town, that the company will profit, then he is either stupid or insane. Corporate chief antagonists can be greedy, arrogant, and callous — but they can’t be stupid. Otherwise, they are unworthy antagonists: their diabolical genius is what makes them so dangerous — and interesting.
That leaves the insanity defense: if you know of some arcane, perverse and perfectly legal legerdemain that would enable the CEO & company to escape all legal liability and blowback, then you have the potential for a credible and interesting story.
Or if your story is “based upon” or “inspired by” an event where a company (in the EPA era, since 1970) did try to foist a toxic dump in the making on a town and almost succeeded. Truth is stranger than fiction. And more interesting and compelling.
But if the fiction is stranger than the truth….
fwiw
See lessA self-centered, big-city, corporate lawyer finds himself between a rock and hard place when assigned to represent a multi-billionaire client set on ruthless exploitation of his hometown.
I'm taking a wild guess that you are one of those heretics who don't genuflect before the altar of the limited liability corporation. Neither do I. That said, in the current environmental regulatory and legal environment, I find the premise improbable: that is, that the CEO thinks he can foist the cRead more
I’m taking a wild guess that you are one of those heretics who don’t genuflect before the altar of the limited liability corporation.
Neither do I.
That said, in the current environmental regulatory and legal environment, I find the premise improbable: that is, that the CEO thinks he can foist the contamination on the town and evade clean up costs, now and in the future. If he knows he is donating a toxic time bomb that will inevitably detonate, then he would surely know his corporate ass will be hauled into court to pay cleanup costs.
Further, he would know that the company will get bitch-slapped with punitive costs in court that (combined with the clean up costs) could drive his company (and himself) into bankruptcy. So the bottom line –and CEO’s genuflect before the bottom line — is that it would be cheaper to acknowledge and pay for the cleanup.
Now if the CEO thinks he can actually get away with dumping the toxic dump on the town, that the company will profit, then he is either stupid or insane. Corporate chief antagonists can be greedy, arrogant, and callous — but they can’t be stupid. Otherwise, they are unworthy antagonists: their diabolical genius is what makes them so dangerous — and interesting.
That leaves the insanity defense: if you know of some arcane, perverse and perfectly legal legerdemain that would enable the CEO & company to escape all legal liability and blowback, then you have the potential for a credible and interesting story.
Or if your story is “based upon” or “inspired by” an event where a company (in the EPA era, since 1970) did try to foist a toxic dump in the making on a town and almost succeeded. Truth is stranger than fiction. And more interesting and compelling.
But if the fiction is stranger than the truth….
fwiw
See lessA self-centered, big-city, corporate lawyer finds himself between a rock and hard place when assigned to represent a multi-billionaire client set on ruthless exploitation of his hometown.
One other question: what's the time period? Is it contemporary or set in the past, in another decade before the EPA and stronger enforcement of environmental regulations and more aggressive (and successful) litigation of environmental hazards? And is the story set in the United States?
One other question: what’s the time period? Is it contemporary or set in the past, in another decade before the EPA and stronger enforcement of environmental regulations and more aggressive (and successful) litigation of environmental hazards?
And is the story set in the United States?
See less