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Oct. 2021
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Fighting for What’s Right My Path to Personal Injury Law
but didn’t say much. However, the look on her face was priceless. It was clear that she didn’t like what I was telling her and she didn’t need to hear this from a 12-year-old. I continued my education in Burbank before heading off to college and eventually law school. I had always thought of myself as an independent thinker and knew that I wanted to stray from the usual path that most lawyers take after finishing law school. My father had run his own auto body shop and my brother owned a restaurant at the time. I decided to open my own law firm instead of joining a preexisting one. This was much easier said than done, and the first few years were rough. Thankfully, I met a man named George, a retired lawyer who wasn’t quite ready to get out of the game. He took me under his wing and taught me everything he knew about law. A few years later, George approached me with an auto accident case he wanted my assistance on. I was hesitant, since I had spent minimal time in a courtroom and knew little about the case, but George persisted and convinced me to help. Throughout the trial, George constantly threw me into the deep end. He had me cross- examine a witness and give the closing argument. The verdict came back, and our client earned more than 10 times the amount the insurance company had offered prior to trial. I didn’t win that case through flashy tactics or sleight of hand. Instead, I was sincere and told the real story to the jury. I have continued this practice and am more driven than ever to get people what they deserve. Plenty of people say TGIF every week to celebrate the weekend, but I’m much more of a TGIM (Thank God it’s Monday) guy myself. I’m eager to begin every week and find new ways to help our clients.
As I’ve grown older, it’s become more apparent how often people choose the easy path over the right path. At a young age, I always found a way to fight for what I believed was right, even if it ended up getting me into trouble. For the most part, my upbringing played a large role in creating my way of thinking. When I was only 3 days old, my birth mother did not have the financial stability to raise me. This put me at great risk of ending up in the foster care system. Before that could happen, I was adopted by a loving Argentinian and Brazilian couple. My parents taught me the importance of hard work and compassion. My father came to America from Argentina and started with very little. He was able to get a job as an auto mechanic, where he proved how important hard work and dedication were to career-building. After five years, he decided to open his own auto body shop. He put everything he had into that business before moving on to different ventures. In an effort to provide me with the best education possible, my parents enrolled me in a private Catholic school when I was 12. Things went well at first; I did well in my classes and kept pace with my school work, but I soon learned of a darker side. When the first set of report cards came out, our principal decided it would be a good idea to open some and share the results in front of the school. She opened my report card and made comments about how I was doing very well! She then opened the report card of the student behind me and talked about how poorly this student was doing through the beginning of the school year. This encounter felt so wrong that I informed my parents that I wanted to transfer to a different school. I didn’t just want to run from the situation, though. Instead, I scheduled an appointment with the principal. I informed her that I did not feel that I was getting a good education anymore and her comments about other students were inappropriate. She was polite
-Adriano s Facchetti
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Man Sues Woman for Texting During a Movie Date
for the movie ticket he’d paid for. If she didn’t pay, he threatened to go after the money in small claims court. When Cruz initially refused, Vezmar made good on his threat and filed a petition in Austin, Texas. Vezmar made the case that Cruz had violated the cinema’s no cellphone policy and had negatively impacted his and other moviegoers’ experiences of watching a raccoon and a talking tree (among other beings) save the day. He claimed that while he sought modest damages, it was the principle of the thing that really mattered to him. He called Cruz’s behavior “a threat to civilized society.” As entertaining as it might have been to see that case fully make its way through the legal system, the lawsuit was eventually dropped after the TV show “Inside Edition” reunited Cruz and Vezmar and filmed her paying him back for the date. As the camera rolled, he counted his cash and considered them square. Unlike “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” there were no good guys in this story — but that doesn’t make it any less entertaining to read about after the fact!
We’ve probably all found ourselves annoyed with someone who uses their phone during a movie at the theater, but have you ever been so annoyed that you sued them?
That’s what Texas resident Brandon Vezmar decided to do back in 2017, following a “first date from hell” (as Vezmar put it) with
Crystal Cruz. According to Vezmar, about 15 minutes into “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” Cruz was texting on her phone. When Vezmar asked her to stop texting, she refused. Then, Vezmar suggested that she step outside of the theater to text. Cruz took his suggestion and never returned.
Most people would chalk the experience up to a bad date and
move on, but Vezmar was so indignant that he reached out to Cruz the next day and requested that she compensate him $4 for the pizza and $17
Corn Mazes Date Back to Ancient Greece? A Historical Look at This Wacky Fall Tradition
Exploring a corn maze is a great way to get outside and enjoy the fall season with friends and family — but who came up with the idea of wandering around a corn field for fun? As it turns out, outdoor mazes are an ancient tradition, and the American corn maze of the ‘90s sprouted from the mazes of 17th-century European gardens. Don’t believe it? Here’s a quick tour of corn maze history. The Minotaur and the Maze Have you heard of Theseus and the Minotaur? This ancient Greek legend tells the story of the hero Theseus, who ventured into an elaborate maze to kill the half-man, half-bull imprisoned there. The monstrous Minotaur was known to eat heroes, and the labyrinth was known to trap them, but Theseus managed to slay the Minotaur and find his way home with the help of a string that he unspooled as he walked. This story isn’t the first recorded example of a maze or labyrinth — according to the World History encyclopedia, “[L]abyrinths and labyrinthine symbols have been dated to the Neolithic Age in regions as diverse as modern-day Turkey, Ireland, Greece, and India, among others” — but it’s perhaps the most famous ancient tale. If you’ve ever navigated a Halloween corn maze staffed by ghouls and ghosts, you can see the parallels! Garden Art to Get Lost In Mazes formed from bushes began popping up European gardens in the 17th century. They were a popular artistic feature of upper-class gardens in England, more for looking at than solving. One famous
example is the half-mile-long Hampton Maze, which was planted in 1690 and still stands today. The Corn Maze: An American Invention Garden mazes eventually hopped the pond to America but didn’t become interactive puzzles until Don Frantz, Creative Director of the American Maze Company, came on the scene. In 1993, Frantz created the “first ever cornfield maze for private and public entertainment” to attract college kids in Pennsylvania. Today, every small-town corn maze is a descendant of his “Amazing Maize Maze.” To learn more about that wacky history, visit AmericanMaze.com.
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Premises Liability Dog Bites Wrongful Death Catastrophic Injuries
TAKE A Break
If you had to get surgery in the early 1800s, it could be a death sentence. Before the invention of anesthesia, patients needing amputations and other operations were awake and lucid the entire time. Plus, surgery looked more like something from a horror movie than a lifesaving procedure. And it was during this era that Dr. Robert Liston, who was ironically considered one of the best surgeons of his day, performed the deadliest surgery of all time. Before getting into the particulars of what transpired during the surgery itself, you should know a little bit about Dr. Liston. Sure, he was a professional surgeon, but he was also a product of his time. He likely worked with dirty saws and knives while wearing a bloody apron in an unsanitary operating room. He was also named the “fastest knife in the West End” by medical historian Dr. Richard Gordon. He was known for performing surgeries very quickly, which, in the days before anesthesia, was as much as patients could hope for on the operating table. Only 1 in 10 of his patients died on the operating table, which sounds bad until you learn that a nearby hospital reported 1 in 4 people dying from similar procedures. Performed by the ‘Fastest Knife in the West End’ The Deadliest Surgery in History
Halloween Cookie Pizza
Also, in those days, much like crowds used to gather to watch a hanging, people found amputations to be morbidly entertaining — and who wouldn’t want to watch the fastest knife in the West End at work? So, on the fateful day of that deadly surgery, Dr. Liston, ever the showman, cut through his patient’s broken, infected leg with incredible speed — so incredible that he didn’t realize he had cut off two of his assistant’s fingers in the process. Both later died of gangrene (remember the unsanitary tools?). But theirs were not the only deaths that day. When Dr. Liston went for one of his knives, he whipped it about a little too closely to one spectator, slicing through his coat. While he didn’t actually break the man’s skin with his knife, the spectator thought he’d been stabbed and died of shock right there in the operating room. So, instead of saving one life, Dr. Liston killed three people. It’s the only known surgery to have resulted in a 300% mortality rate.
Inspired by Pillsbury.com
Image sourced from Pillsbury.com/recipes/halloween-cookie-pizza/67172821-ddfb-49ce-b658-ddc4ef4b5cf3
This one’s for the candy corn lovers! This “pizza” is far from traditional, but once you try it, you might find yourself making it every October!
Ingredients
• 1 cup candy corn • 1/2 cup chocolate chips • 1/4 cup vanilla frosting
• 1 roll Pillsbury Sugar Cookie Dough • 1/2 cup creamy peanut butter
(store-bought or homemade)
Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350 F. 2. Grease a round, 12-inch pan and line with cookie dough, ensuring the dough covers all but the outer 1/2 inch. 3. Bake for 16–20 minutes until golden brown. Cool completely. 4. Spread the peanut butter over the cooled cookie dough, then sprinkle on the candy corn and chocolate chips. 5. In a small bowl, microwave the frosting for 15 seconds or until liquified. 6. Drizzle the frosting over the “pizza,” slice, and serve!
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Premises Liability Dog Bites Wrongful Death Catastrophic Injuries
FacchettiLaw.com 626.793.8607 301 E. Colorado Blvd., Suite 520 Pasadena, CA 91101
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
How I Learned to Fight for What’s Right
1
Man Sues Woman for Texting During a Movie Date Corn Mazes Date Back to Ancient Greece?
2
Halloween Cookie Pizza The Deadliest Surgery in History
3
The Tiger King Remains Behind Bars
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The Tiger King Remains Behind Bars Judges Deny Joe Exotic’s Appeal
scheme. Victims are allowed to attend court proceedings so long as the judge decides their testimony (if they are also a witness) will not be affected by their attendance. Maldonado-Passage’s legal team asserted that Baskin was not a victim of any sort, since the murder-for-hire plot did not result in her murder. However, U.S. Circuit Court judges ruled that she still suffered emotional and financial harm because of the incident. In addition to this, since Maldonado-Passage conspired to have Baskin murdered two different times, the judge at his trial in 2019 had incorrectly considered them as two separate plots, rather than two attempts at the same murder. The U.S. Circuit Court judges ordered the trial judge to resentence him. So, even for all that trouble, Maldonado-Passage remains behind bars. However, so long as the Tiger King’s popularity continues, it won’t be surprising if Joe Exotic and his legal team keep searching for ways to get him out of prison.
Even more than a year after the release of “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness,” Joseph Maldonado-Passage, more popularly known as Joe Exotic, continues to make headlines. Following the fame that came with having his story at the center of a wildly popular Netflix series, Maldonado-Passage saw fit to appeal his 22-year prison sentence for plotting to murder big cat rescue activist Carole Baskin on a few different grounds. However, in July, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected his appeal. The primary reason for Maldonado-Passage’s appeal, as reported by his legal team, was that Baskin was allowed to attend the entirety of Maldonado-Passage’s trial, despite her role as a witness in the case. As a general rule, witnesses are not permitted to attend proceedings in their entirety, as other witness testimonies might affect the objectivity of their own testimony.
However, Baskin was also in attendance at the trial as a victim, since she was the target of Maldonado-Passage’s murder-for-hire
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Premises Liability Dog Bites Wrongful Death Catastrophic Injuries
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