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Wal-Mart Vs. Officer Jimmy Singleton

Wal-Mart is now fighting to keep disability benefits from non-employees and well as employees.

Former Pine Bluff Police Officer Jimmy Singleton was shot in the ankle and knocked unconscious from a blow to the head in 2003 while patting down a suspect. Today he suffers frequent migraines, and the bullet remains lodged in his ankle making it difficult to walk or stand up for long periods of time. For the past 4 years he’s been waging a nasty court battle to receive disability benefits.

So where does Wal-Mart come in? To flex it’s political and legal muscle, and push the Arkansas court to set a Wal-Mart-friendly precedent by denying him benefits. Both Wal-Mart and Tyson, Arkansas’ largest employers, “tendered friend-of-the-court briefs with the state Supreme Court this month arguing his claim should be denied.”

In addition to being completely shameless treatment of an officer wounded in the public service, this looks to be another horrible business decision for a company who continually struggles with its public image. We’ll see what happens when Wal-Mart’s PR people catch wind of this disaster-in-the-making.

*Jeff Hess Over at Writing on the Wal has a post up on the Singleton case as well.

Wal-Mart, Tyson Oppose Injured Officer’s Claim [NW Arkansas Morning News]:

Former Pine Bluff police officer Jimmy Singleton was patting down a suspect on March 1, 2003, when the man stuck a gun in his stomach.

Singleton received a gunshot wound to his left ankle and a blow to the head that knocked him unconscious in the ensuing struggle. He says he sustained neurological damage that affected his thinking and that he walks with a limp because of bullet fragments.

“If I stand on my foot too long my foot will swell up,” Singleton said. “I can’t stand loud noises and bright lights. I get migraine headaches all the time.”

For the past five years, Singleton, 43, has been fighting a court battle to obtain disability benefits. It’s a fight that has pitted him against some unexpected opponents, including Bentonville-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Springdale-based Tyson Foods Inc.

Singleton was puzzled when the world’s largest retailer and the world’s largest meat processor, along with the Arkansas Chamber of Commerce and two other employers’ associations, tendered friend-of-the-court briefs with the state Supreme Court this month arguing his claim should be denied.

“That just blows me out of the water,” he said. “I have no clue. My attorney told me, and I couldn’t understand it. I don’t know why they’re getting involved.”

Fort Smith lawyer E. Diane Graham, who is representing Wal-Mart, Tyson Foods and the Arkansas Self-Insured Association in the matter, said the scope of the case goes beyond Singleton and his former employer.

“I think it’s an issue that’s of interest to employers, period,” she said.

Since Singleton first filed his claim for benefits, the state Worker’s Compensation Commission has twice voted to deny it. The commission said there was no objective evidence showing that Singleton sustained permanent physical impairment.

Singleton’s attorney, Kenneth Harper of Monticello, said he wasn’t sure how the commission could say that about Singleton’s ankle injury.

“He’s got a bullet in the dad-gum thing,” Harper said. “That’s pretty objective to me.”

The state Court of Appeals has reversed both of the commission’s rulings against Singleton, finding that the commission wrongly excluded some evidence from consideration.

“The claimant’s allegations of a foot injury affecting his mobility are quite clearly supported by observed bullet fragments embedded in his foot,” the court said in its first opinion in the case.

After the commission denied Singleton’s claim a second time, the Court of Appeals said in a strongly worded opinion that the commission could not usurp the judiciary’s function in interpreting state law.

“Should the commission, on remand, again refuse to comply with our mandate, recourse may be had to enforcement by the Arkansas Supreme Court,” the appeals court said.

On June 12, the city of Pine Bluff petitioned the state’s highest court to review the case and overturn the Court of Appeals’ rulings.

Four days later, lawyers for Wal-Mart, Tyson, the Arkansas Self-Insured Association, the Arkansas Chamber of Commerce and the Association of Independent Industries tendered two friend-of-the-court briefs also asking the state Supreme Court to reverse the lower court’s rulings.

“Now we’re going from the legal realm and we’re moving into the political realm,” Harper said. “Somebody is wanting to assert some influence.”

Graham declined to discuss specifics of the case, but she said in her brief that her clients have an interest in the matter because the case presents the very important issue of preserving the fact-finding and rule-making authority of the state Worker’s Compensation Commission.

Graham said the commission acted within its authority when it gave more weight to the testimony of doctors who said Singleton sustained no permanent impairment than to the testimony of a doctor who said there was impairment.

“Although the Arkansas appellate courts certainly have the authority to conduct judicial review, that authority does not extend to allow a review process which would substitute fact-finding decisions of the appellate courts for the decisions of the commission,” Graham argued in the brief.

Harper said the “big boys” are interested in the case because they fear the Court of Appeals’ rulings will set a precedent that will allow more people to collect on disability claims.

Meanwhile, Harper said, Singleton has yet to receive disability benefits more than five years after he was injured while serving the public.

“I really think it’s just an ugly situation,” he said.

Now retired, Singleton - who served as McGehee police chief from 1993 to 1999 - said he does receive retirement benefits, but that they don’t go far in today’s economy. He said he does not understand why so many people object to him receiving benefits for his disability.

“I was a chief of police, and I never treated anybody like this,” he said.

Posted by Eric Bull on Monday, June 30, 2008

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COMMENTS

“Irrational creatures cannot distinguish between injury and damage, and therefore, as long as they be at ease, they are not offended with their fellows.” Hobbes

WalMart/Edelman/orange- Our plan for crapping on American sensibilities is working. The suckers will never know how our new “Slave More. Lie Better” mollifying propaganda makes their poverty.

SanDiegoView in
Monday, June 30 at 01:14 PM

Friday, June 27, 2008:

This week on Exposé: a new episode online and on Bill Moyers Journal. The numbers coming out of the Bureau of Labor Statistics say the poultry industry’s safety record has improved over the last decade. But are those numbers right? Reporters from The Charlotte Observer asked labor attorneys, experts in workplace safety, regulators, doctors, and over 200 poultry workers. They analyzed thousands of pages of documents, including Occupational Safety & Health Administration records, company injury logs, and academic studies. The result? Their investigative series, “The Cruelest Cuts,” shows why the poultry industry is not as safe as it claims to be. Congress took note, with the Senate holding two hearings in April. And just last week, the House Committee on Education and Labor started asking some questions of its own.

Read The Observer’s original 6-part series and follow the ongoing coverage. Watch last week’s House hearing on the “hidden tragedy” of workplace injuries. . Ask the reporters about their investigation by submitting questions to the Blog on the Bill Moyers Journal site. And learn about musculoskeletal disorders—the most common work-related injuries among poultry workers.~~~~~~~~Note:Go to Bill Moyers Journal website and link on to these powerful stories .I watched this Expose story on his PBS show Friday night. The Charlotte Observer’s reporters did yeoman’s work for this story. The inhumanity visited upon these poultry processing workers to avoid paying worker’s comp is equal with the most primitive of third world countries. This is a must see,folks.Truly indefensible.in the USA! ~~~~~~~~~~And these are two of the companies pushing for a $1.6 Billion bypass turnaround to be built in NW Arkansas,funded by private citizen’s taxes and eminent domain taxing authority?

ddrb in
Monday, June 30 at 02:06 PM

From “They Live” script: 

“Our impulses are being redirected

We live in an artificially-induced state of consciousness,

The movement began eight months ago

By a group of scientists.

They accidentally discovered these signals being sent. 

The under-class is growing,

Human rights are non-existent.

In their repressive society, we are their unwitting accomplices.

Their intention to rule rests with the annihilation of consciousness.

We have been lulled into a trance,

They have made us indifferent.

We are focused only on our own gain.

They are safe as long as they are not discovered.

That is their method of survival,

Keep us asleep. 

Keep us selfish.

Keep us sedated.

We are their cattle.

We are being bred for slavery.

We cannot break their signal.

The signal must be shut off at the source.

They want benign indifference.

We could be pets or food, but all we really are is livestock.”

ddrb in
Monday, June 30 at 10:00 PM

oh jesus christ wmw.boy has this site stooped even lower.

m att hew vantress in gresham,oregon
Tuesday, July 01 at 05:21 AM

ok it was assholes like me that betrayed america and bought all that chinese stuff.i am addicted to cheap crap and demand that everyone buy it only at walmart.you may think i am an unamerican asshole but that is only part of the story.i love being poor and without benefits and just really stupid and full of shit on here.i hate quality stuff and good paying jobs because i cant get either at walmart so shut your piehole you hypocrite loser.btw did i mention i am a complete asshole?

m att hew vantress in gresham,oregon
Wednesday, July 02 at 04:47 AM

If the officer was legitimately on duty and responding to a call to the store and in the process of protecting himself he is injured violently by a gun toting criminal than the police department owes the officer something including some sort of partial disability.  Society has got to do a better job of protecting its police officers.  I recall when Congm. Dick Cheney, now VP, voted against banning “cop killer bullets” and the stupid FOP and many police officers foolishly supported the Bush/Cheney Gun Nut Ticket.  Regardless of police officer voting patterns, we’ve got to look out for their best interest.  Pay the officer some sort of disability and/or give him some sort of less strenuous duty.  As to friends of the court, it appears to be a case of not wanting to pay for the harm “gun nut felons” visit upon police officers and patrons to the store and to absolve themselves from liability.  These people are the same people who would gladly send their employees to the Hospital Emergency Room for their medical benefits rather than providing it for them and screech to the bloody heavens if they are asked to have a heart, show some compassion, take care of those who take care of you!

Rayne G. Poussard in Florida
Monday, July 07 at 10:03 PM

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