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Defense experts using controversial ‘malingering’ test

Defense experts using controversial ‘malingering’ test
By Sylvia Hsieh

Staff writer
Published: April 7, 2008

A controversial test that is supposed to detect “malingering” is gaining popularity among defense experts in personal injury, workers’ compensation and other cases.

The “Fake Bad Scale” is being offered by medical experts as evidence that plaintiffs are fabricating or exaggerating their pain or other medical symptoms.

Critics attack the test’s validity, and claim it is biased against women, the disabled and victims of post-traumatic stress.

A few courts have ruled on the admissibility of the test, including three Florida courts that excluded testimony about it last year.

In one of those cases, a trial judge in Hillsborough Country, Fla. ruled after a Frye hearing that the test was “not an objective measurement of effort, malingering or over-reporting of symptoms” because there was no manual for administering or scoring the test. It also held that the name “fake bad scale” is itself “pejorative and derogatory and thus prejudicial.” (Williams v. CSX Transportation Inc., No. 04-CA-008892.)

The test is still relatively unknown among the plaintiffs’ bar, but attorneys who are following the issue say the test is often used in workers’ comp cases. More recently, it has appeared in suits brought under the Defense Base Act involving contractors who claim post-traumatic stress after returning from Iraq or other military assignments.

How the test works

The fake bad scale was created in 1991 by Dr. Paul Lees-Haley, a neuropsychologist in Woodland Hills, Calif. who testifies as an expert witness for the defense.

The test has gained traction in defense circles because it was recently included by the University of Minnesota as one of the scales in its MMPI-2 personality test.

The fake bad scale is a series of 43 true or false questions such as “I have very few headaches,” “I have nightmares every few nights” and “My sex life is satisfactory.”

Each response of a symptom adds a point toward the total score.

A total score of 23 out of 43 would be considered a “high score” and should “raise suspicions of over-reporting of symptoms,” said Dr. Manfred Greiffenstein, a proponent of the test. He added that it would be virtually impossible for anyone who is not exaggerating to score 30 or higher.

However, critics note that the cut-off score has changed. The author previously recommended a cut-off of 20, while others have suggested a cut-off score of 26 for women.

Greiffenstein acknowledged that the test is scored on a “sliding scale.”

A leading critic of the test, Dr. James Butcher, PhD, a senior author of the MMPI-2 and a professor at University of Minnesota, said that the fake bad scale does not meet the standards set by other MMPI-2 scales and “greatly overestimates” malingering.

In one study, Butcher tested over 2,000 women in a care center for eating disorders and found that 44 percent would have been misclassified as malingerers using the 23 point cut-off score.

He also criticized the test for not taking into account gender-based norms, noting that, for example, women in the general population report more headaches than men, as well as hot flashes, another question on the fake bad test.

Just because women report more symptoms “does not mean that women are more likely to malinger than men,” Butcher said.

Admissibility arguments

Plaintiffs’ attorneys are just beginning to attack the test in court.

Richard Berman, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla. workers’ comp attorney, represents a teacher with several injuries who is not seeking monetary compensation, but requesting that her psychiatric care be reinstated.

“The defense expert testified in his deposition that based on the fake bad scale … my client was faking,” said Berman. He stated that his client, a woman in her 40s, was unfairly penalized by questions on the test that give points toward faking for honestly answering questions related to anxiety, depression and hot flashes.

At a Frye hearing scheduled for April 28, he will argue that the fake bad scale lacks scientific validity, is gender-biased and takes issues of credibility away from the fact finder.

“In order to pass the Frye test, [a test] must be not controversial and be based on scientific validity. This test is highly controversial, and how can it be valid if you don’t have a protocol or a cut-off score that stays the same?” said Berman.

Leopoldo Garcia, a Miami attorney who heads the workers comp’ division at Angones, McClure & Garcia and is defending the case, said the test should be allowed in and then subject to cross examination.

“There are a lot of psychologists who believe [the fake bad scale] merits being used. It’s been around for years and has been used all over the country,” he said, noting that six of eight panel members believed it merited inclusion in the MMPI-2.

Attorneys who handle brain injury cases have also been active in challenging the test’s admissibility.

“People with brain injuries have problems with attention, concentration, memory loss, depression and fatigue, so they would legitimately have a high score,” said Bruce Stern, an attorney at Stark & Stark in Lawrenceville, N.J., who has lectured about the fake bad scale.

Michael Phelan, an attorney at Butler, Williams & Skilling in Richmond, Va., said he represented a 57 year-old woman who failed the fake bad scale even though a car collision left her with a broken leg and brain swelling that required cutting open her skull.

“The test …invades the province of the jury. From a common-sense perspective, if a person is truly disabled by either physical and/or psychological injuries, you can’t take the test and not fail it. The result is to be categorized as a faker,” Phelan said.

His case settled in December 2007 for $3.5 million, after mediation.

He noted that his client passed the other MMPI-2 scales for malingering.


Marine awarded $3.5 million in damages from military insurer

Marine awarded $3.5 million in damages from military insurer
By ALLISON HOFFMAN, Associated Press Writer

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

A Marine captain who is on his third tour in Iraq was awarded $3.5 million in punitive damages Tuesday from a servicemembers’ insurance company for water damage to his house.

Capt. John Colombero already won $50,000 in damages for emotional distress last week after his lawyers argued that he spent time between deployments arguing with his insurance company, USAA. The insurer had denied a 2004 claim for $84,744 in damage to his house in Oceanside, south of the Marine Corps’ Camp Pendleton.

Colombero’s father said financial uncertainty and paperwork associated with the insurance claim and lawsuit took their toll on his son.

“The Marines don’t give you much flexibility, so he had to take care of the documents and then worry about his deployment too,” John Colombero, Sr., said in an interview. “He’d get up at 4:30 in the morning and come home at 10:30 at night and then have to deal with this.”

USAA spokesman Roger Wildermuth defended the company’s work and said the insurer plans to appeal the damages.

Jurors indicated on court forms that the punitive award was intended to punish USAA for malice, oppression and fraudulent conduct, said Ricardo Echeverria, Colombero’s lawyer.

An insurance litigation analyst said the damages would likely be reduced.

“I say ‘wow’ because it’s really an amazing jump to get from the initial award to those punitive damages,” said David Rossmiller, managing editor of the Insurance Coverage Law Blog. “It absolutely plays into people’s minds, that he’s a Marine. Would they have given the same award to somebody else? Maybe not.”

USAA, a private company based in San Antonio, provides insurance and financial services to 5.6 million servicemembers and their families.

Colombero, 34, originally of San Jose, bought his three-bedroom house for $352,000 in 2002 and rented out the spare bedrooms to make his payments. In 2004, after he returned from a tour in Baghdad, Colombero decided to build an addition. A pipe burst during construction, damaging the foundation.

Colombero, who testified before he deployed again March 20, heard about the verdict when he made on a phone call to his fiancee, Kimberly Collins, from Iraq.

“We were in there with the jurors, so I put him on speakerphone and he thanked them for their service,” Collins said. “Then I took him off speakerphone and told him they just gave him $3.5 million, and he just said, ‘Oh my God.’”


How a get-tough policy lifted Allstate’s profits

How a get-tough policy lifted Allstate’s profits

By Paige St. John
Published Sunday, April 6, 2008 at 4:30 a.m.

For more than a decade, Allstate Insurance Co. kept a secret from its auto policyholders — a national strategy to force customers to accept reduced cash payouts or face years in court.

For more than a decade, Allstate Insurance Co. fought to keep under wraps work papers and other documents that describe how the insurer has made money by reducing payments to some policyholders.

That changed abruptly late Friday, when Allstate unexpectedly posted 150,000 pages of the documents on its Web site. The insurer declared it had had enough of media reports based on inflammatory “snippets” taken from the files.

“We still believe the documents deserve protection,” said spokesman Mike Siemienas, “but it’s outweighed by the need to address the misunderstanding of the public.”

In that act, Allstate reversed its longstanding policy to fight the release of documents that show how it determines payouts. Among the most contested documents are the so-called McKinsey files.

From 1992 through 1997 and beyond, a team of Allstate executives and their consultants from McKinsey & Co. huddled at the insurer’s Northbrook, Ill., campus, to craft a top-to-bottom overhaul of Allstate’s claims system.

After each session, Allstate and its consultants were careful to retrieve and pack up the confidential files that had been handed out with their references to zero sum games and “boxing gloves.”

It was not until midway through this decade that trial lawyers realized a treasure trove lay buried in those records … if they could get them.

The originals were kept in guarded locations, and trial lawyers’ efforts across the country to obtain copies for litigation were blocked through a Phoenix, Ariz., firm. Where Allstate failed to convince a judge to seal the files, it took default judgments or defied orders for production — including in a Missouri case where the contempt fine now exceeds $4.1 million.

At one point, Allstate said, it even sought criminal prosecution of those attempting to publish the files.

According to an Allstate lawyer testifying before the New Mexico Supreme Court last month, the sequestered records were akin to the secret recipe for Coca-Cola.

“And that formula has been kept secret for 100 years,” said Ben Cooper.

Until Friday, the clearest public insight to what lay within Allstate’s McKinsey files was the product of a 2000 accident injury case in New Mexico.

Santa Fe attorney David Berardinelli obtained temporary possession of four boxes of Allstate’s claims files, and made copious notes before returning the records in 2004.

Berardinelli’s plan to publish a book for the general public next month, and a Florida appellate court decision against Allstate on Friday, may have finally convinced Allstate it was losing the war.

Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty last year ordered Allstate to produce the McKinsey files and other documents. The insurer balked. On Friday, an appeals court upheld McCarty’s punitive order for Allstate to cease writing new policies in Florida.

The court said the state had the right to demand the McKinsey documents because they might prove or disprove the allegation that Allstate had arbitrarily cut auto insurance claims by 20 percent — an allegation that, if true, posed an “immediate danger to the public health, safety or welfare.”

Within hours, Allstate posted its documents.

The announcement was a striking reversal of Allstate’s past efforts, including its stance when the Herald-Tribune sought the documents.

In Indiana, Allstate was fined $10,000 for disobeying a judge who ordered a public production of the files. The fine is unpaid while the insurer’s appeal is before the Indiana Supreme Court. In Missouri, Allstate faces a $25,000-a-day contempt fine that now tops more than $4.1 million for defying a similar demand. An appeal is on hold until a trial on the underlying car accident claim.

As recently as early March, Allstate argued in New Mexico that releasing the files would give its competitors an unfair edge.

Allstate over the weekend said it would now advise the appropriate judges of its new position on the files.

Listening to Cooper’s arguments in court a month ago was Jose Pincheira, the 78-year-old Santa Fe man whose 1997 accident fueled much of the national battle over Allstate’s claims system.

Pincheira worked at a Sears store in 1961, when that company owned Allstate. Allstate agents helped teach him English at night. In 1997, Pincheira and his wife were injured in an accident, but Allstate rejected his claim and is still contesting medical payments.

During his case, some of Allstate’s McKinsey documents have briefly been forced open only to be closed again after court arguments.

Come Monday, Berardinelli said, he will file a new motion that Allstate be sanctioned “for abusing the court system.”

“Why have they taken years and years of the court’s time and resources? As recently as a month ago, they were telling courts they would suffer financial harm if these documents were released,” Berardinelli said.

For Pincheira, the battle over files is eclipsed by his sense of a personal wrong.

“I don’t care if they ever pay me,” he said outside the New Mexico Supreme Court last month. “I care they lose, because they are crooks. You are in good hands, what a lie.”
Thousands of pages of Allstate documents reviewed by the Herald-Tribune detail how the nation’s second-largest insurer systematically cut payments to customers as a way to boost profits.

The documents describe a two-pronged strategy.

First, the company evaluates claims with a computer program designed to reduce payouts by as much as 20 percent of what the company once paid for the same injuries.

Second, Allstate pushes policyholders to accept quick settlements without the help of lawyers. Policyholders who try to fight for more money face Allstate attorneys coached to refuse to negotiate and to drag out litigation.

The approach often forces car accident victims to take what Allstate offers right away or spend years in court while their bills go unpaid — a strategy Allstate spelled out in guidelines for claims adjusters that “forces the claimant and attorney to think about the obstacles they must overcome …”

The Herald-Tribune examined summaries and transcripts meticulously re-created from more than 12,000 pages of what were then secret Allstate records describing the system, as well as ex-employees’ depositions and company documents from suits across the nation.

Allstate has since made those documents public, unexpectedly posting some 150,000 pages of its internal business files to its Web site.

An Allstate spokesman said Friday the company decided to release the full documents to “dispel inaccurate portrayal” of its claims practices by lawyers, regulators and others around the nation. Taken as a whole, he said, the documents show Allstate’s aggressive efforts to fight fraud.

The release came on the heels of a Florida appeals court ruling that state regulators have the right to ban Allstate from writing new policies because of its refusal to turn over those and other documents to state investigators.

The files reviewed by the Herald-Tribune, and those now revealed by Allstate, tell how the company succeeded in its effort to “redefine the game” of insurance as architects of the strategy had coached in the mid-1990s.

It was a “Zero Sum Economic Game. Allstate gains … others must lose,” declared a consultant’s PowerPoint slide from a 1994 presentation to executives.

During the next five years of Allstate’s claims overhaul, the same consultant, New York-based McKinsey & Co., chose confrontational words to describe the new system. In PowerPoint presentations and discussion papers drawn up for Allstate executives, McKinsey used “boxing gloves” to characterize how Allstate should treat policyholders who balk at settlements. For customers who hired lawyers, McKinsey urged, “align alligators,” adding these instructions: “sit and wait.”

The documents also show:

Allstate removed much of the discretion of local claims agents to set payouts, requiring them to base their recommendations on a computer program called Colossus. Under that program, average payouts for bodily injuries dropped more than 20 percent in the first few years, internal documents show, a big step toward reaching McKinsey’s goal of “establishing a new fair market value” of such injuries.

Allstate recognized that when an injured driver hired a lawyer, the insurer lost money. In repeated presentations to Allstate executives, McKinsey coached tougher and increased legal action. By 1996, Allstate had doubled its legal force, hiring 225 more lawyers. “The bottom line is that Allstate is trying more cases than ever before,” a corporate newsletter said.

Policyholders claiming injuries from minor-impact accidents and who hired lawyers were suspected of fraud, and therefore often targeted for reduced payments. In 1998, Virginia insurance regulators cited evidence: corporate guidelines that called for agents in such cases to “make a nominal offer, if warranted; or deny claim.” The purpose, Allstate stated, was “to send a message to attorneys … It forces the claimant and attorney to think about the obstacles they must overcome to recover a significant settlement or the benefits of a smaller ‘walkaway’ settlement.”

Allstate set goals to contact policyholders who filed claims within three days, to speed settlements and increase customer satisfaction. But documents show the insurer also tracked how speedy contact reduced the number of lawyers hired by accident victims — by as much as 20 percent in some markets.

The insurance company saw reduced payouts as a way to increase profits. Early on, consultants promised that driving down the “fair market value” of soft-tissue injuries, such as a fractured spine, chronic pain or limited mobility, would generate profits “shareholders will notice.” Combined with similar changes to Allstate’s home insurance and collision programs, they predicted, the yearly gain could reach $1.1 billion.

Allstate rewrote its claims policies at a time when the entire industry was grappling with legal cases it felt were out of control. Accident victims were hiring lawyers to push for more money for hard-to-prove injuries such as whiplash and back pain. An Allstate memo shows that accident victim lawyers were involved in two-thirds of the company’s bodily injury claims.

An Allstate spokesman in Northbrook, Ill., said that the company’s claims policies are legal and fair to its customers, and that its push to reduce payouts is aimed at rooting out fraud and overpayments for questionable injuries.

Allstate says it never crossed the line between what it called “holding the line” on claims and underpaying them. The insurer also says it did not adopt everything its management consultants recommended, including the phrases “boxing gloves” or “alligators.”

But Allstate acknowledges it does embrace a tough legal strategy designed to curb insurance fraud, “abusive medical testing” and “unnecessary plaintiff attorney payments.”

“We will offer to settle the claim for a fair and reasonable amount,” said corporate affairs spokesman Mike Siemienas.

When victims hire a lawyer and sue, he said, “just because we are being threatened doesn’t mean we will negotiate. We will go to trial.”

Throughout the redesign, McKinsey said the changes were key for increasing profits and the value of Allstate’s stock. The consultant described Allstate’s “customers” as shareholders, not policyholders.

The result a decade later closely resembles what Allstate and McKinsey said they were aiming for — an insurer so notorious for sticking to its settlement offers that lawyers are reluctant to take cases involving Allstate.

“There are many lawyers who won’t take an Allstate case,” said Sarasota trial attorney David Shapiro. Even when they do, he said, clients give up as they realize they will have to wait years while Allstate forces their case to trial.

“It’s that boxing thing,” he said. “They just get tired. They lose their resolve more often than they get stronger.”

Redefining the game

Allstate’s attempt to redefine the claims game for the more than 2 million households it insures in Florida and 16 million it covers nationwide dates back to 1992.

The insurer hired consultants from McKinsey & Co. — one of the world’s largest management consulting firms — to guide an overhaul of its claims practices, and hopefully, improve flat profits.

McKinsey drafted an often adversarial relationship between Allstate and its customers.

Paying policyholders more than needed was “leakage” and later “opportunity.”

“Win by exploiting the economics of the practice of law,” a slide encouraged.

McKinsey’s “claims organization of the future” revolved around two axes — standardizing claims awards across the board; and stopping policyholders from hiring lawyers.

The first was accomplished with Allstate’s adoption of Colossus, replacing subjective claims agents who the redesign plan labeled as prone to giving policyholders too much.

The program, created by Computer Sciences Corp. and now a mainstay in the insurance industry, calculates injury awards based on factors such as severity of injury and policyholder age. Individual insurers can then “tune” the unregulated software to change payout amounts, making adjustments based on hundreds of factors.

Allstate concedes that it has tuned Colossus numerous times, but says that it has never done so unfairly.

A 15-year-old memo — not included in the files Allstate has made public — shows Colossus was set to produce claim awards that were, across the board, 20 percent below the prior average. Further, it instructs that claims agents and their managers “will want to stay within the Colossus range or below it in most cases.”

Allstate said the memo was created by one regional office only, and “does not represent Allstate’s official position or views,” Siemienas said. “Colossus was not uniformly tuned to recommend 20 percent less than average claims settlements.”

Current records are not available to show how Allstate uses the computer program to set cash payouts nationwide. Insurers are not required to provide details of the computer programs they use to drive claim settlements, and they fight fiercely to keep those records private. Allstate, court affidavits show, has even sought criminal prosecution of those trying to publish details of its claims system.

Though details are not available, Allstate’s own records show the insurer’s average payment for bodily injury cases dropped 20 percent as it adopted Colossus nationwide. Automation put Allstate at the forefront of a change in the insurance industry — most major insurers now use the software to evaluate claims. At a business conference in 2006, Allstate announced it was spending another $95 million to add to the technology.

The movement caused some discomfort within Allstate. A 1996 presentation by the McKinsey team noted resistance from some of Allstate’s claims agents, saying there was a “lack of buy-in in some markets due to belief that tuning is not proper.”

Colossus is just one of many tools used to determine fair payouts, spokesman Siemienas said. Allstate also uses programs to evaluate the medical care claimants receive and the bills their doctors submit.

“Using Colossus assists claim personnel to more consistently and objectively evaluate casualty claims,” Siemienas said.

Cracking down on lawyers

PowerPoint slides show the McKinsey consultants also advised Allstate to convince policyholders they did not need lawyers, and then to target those who disregarded that advice for denials, delays and litigation.

Other claims were to be marked early on for trial “to send a message to the market.”

In this new game, the consultants said, 90 percent of Allstate’s claimants would get a settlement check within weeks — “good hands” treatment.

But the remaining 10 percent of accident victims would wait and wait — three years or more according to a chart drawn by McKinsey and labeled “boxing gloves.”

Tampa trial lawyer Robert Healy says the reality today of doing business with Allstate reflects McKinsey’s tactics.

“They pay less than every single insurance company, and they certainly will spend more on litigation,” said Healy, a former Allstate lawyer who was with the company after it implemented its current claims strategy.

“They put pressure on people by establishing that they are a bully in the market.”

Allstate contends it operates within the strictures of state insurance regulations, and points to a New Mexico review that found no fault with the company’s claims practices.

However, regulators in Virginia and South Carolina reviewing hundreds of claims files found that some policyholders, those who suffered contestable injuries in minor accidents and hired attorneys, were unfairly targeted for outright denials or “nominal” offers of $1,000.

“Allstate’s goal of paying only what is owed on any given claim is commendable,” Virginia regulators wrote in 1999. “However, the method the company chose to reduce overpayments has led to violations of the Unfair Claims Settlement Practices Act.”

A $36 billion insurer has the advantage in such games, contends David Berardinelli, a Santa Fe lawyer who has spent much of the past five years trying to force Allstate to make its claims handling practices public. The author of a trial guide on the subject, Berardinelli plans a consumer book this spring under the title: “From Good Hands to Boxing Gloves.”

“When you look at it from the policyholders’ point of view, here you are, your home is flattened. They come to you and offer (a low settlement) to you within the first 180 days. McKinsey knew that financial pressure in that first 180 days would be at its greatest,” Berardinelli said.

“They won’t walk away happy. They’ll just walk away. A lot of them won’t understand how badly they’ve been abused.”

National rollout

According to status reports given to Allstate executives, the McKinsey approach was tested in the mid-1990s with auto accident victims in markets such as West Palm Beach, Horsham, Penn., and Tustin, Calif., then rolled out nationally. By 1997, it was expanded to include claims on collision, home fire, water and roof damage.

With the first target of reform, the promised initial return was a 15 percent reduction in third-party bodily injury payouts — reimbursements for non-Allstate customers injured in by Allstate policyholders.

The reality was better.

A 1995 Allstate survey showed the “Colossus tuning process” lowered payments for subjective injuries such as back pain by 10 percent in Los Angeles, 14 percent in New Jersey, and 22 percent in Washington, D.C.

The biggest drop was in the Florida Atlantic region. Payouts fell 23 percent below the national average.

“Florida East and Florida West are getting phenomenal, never-seen-before results in terms of loss/cost management,” a 1997 Allstate newsletter declared.

Allstate today pays less than most other auto insurers in Florida for accident injuries, averaging $16,884 per claim in early 2007 compared with an $18,105 average for the industry. The insurer said it was not fair to compare the numbers because of potential differences in the policyholders Allstate recruits.

Beyond reduced payouts, McKinsey’s analysis showed Allstate’s biggest savings would come from removing policyholders’ lawyers from the equation.

Eliminating the lawyer in just half of cases involving soft-tissue injuries such as whiplash would boost Allstate’s profit by $240 a share, McKinsey calculated.

Allstate Chairman Ed Liddy touted the results at an international business conference in New York two years ago, showing Allstate had reduced its average check to a car accident victim by 20 percent, and held growth in other auto and home claims below industry averages.

“We obviously pay what we owe, that is a given,” Liddy told attendees, according to a transcript of his remarks. “But we do it more efficiently, and we avoid overpayments …”

Allstate has been sanctioned by regulators in at least two states, Virginia and South Carolina, and sued by policyholders claiming bad faith, forcing it into confidential settlements and large jury verdicts, including a $20 million award in 2006 (later reduced to $8 million) to an Indiana man hurt in a car accident 11 years earlier.

But Allstate’s incentives to keep the system have proven larger.

Since changing the way it regards claims, Allstate has reported the largest profits of its 77-year history. It had a record profit of $4.9 billion in 2006. In 2007, it reported a $4.6 billion profit.


Wal-Mart: Brain-damaged former employee can keep money

From Randi Kaye
CNN

(CNN) — A former Wal-Mart employee who suffered severe brain damage in a traffic accident won’t have to pay back the company for the cost of her medical care, Wal-Mart told the family Tuesday.

Debbie Shank, 52, has severe brain damage after a traffic accident in May 2000.

1 of 3 “Occasionally, others help us step back and look at a situation in a different way. This is one of those times,” Wal-Mart Executive Vice President Pat Curran said in a letter. “We have all been moved by Ms. Shank’s extraordinary situation.”

Eight years ago, Debbie Shank was stocking shelves for the retail giant and signed up for Wal-Mart’s health and benefits plan.

After a tractor-trailer slammed into her minivan, the 52-year-old mother of three lost much of her short-term memory and was confined to a wheelchair. She now lives in a nursing home.

She also lost her 18-year-old son, Jeremy, who was killed shortly after arriving in Iraq. When Debbie Shank asks family members how her son is doing and they remind her that he’s dead, she weeps as if hearing the news for the first time.

Wal-Mart’s health care plan lets the retail giant recoup the cost of its expenses if an employee collects damages in a lawsuit. And Wal-Mart set out to do just that after Shank and her husband, Jim, won $1 million after suing the trucking company involved in the wreck. After legal fees, the couple received $417,000.

Wal-Mart sued the Shanks to recoup $470,000 it paid for her medical care. However, a court ruled that the company could only recoup about $275,000 — the amount that was left in a trust fund for her care.

The Shanks appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, but the court declined in March to hear the case. CNN told the couple’s story last week, prompting thousands of angry blog responses and at least two online petitions to boycott the company.

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“We wanted you to know that Wal-Mart will not seek any reimbursement for the money already spent on Ms. Shank’s care, and we will work with you to ensure the remaining amounts in the trust can be used for her ongoing care,” Curran said.

“We are sorry for any additional stress this uncertainty has placed on you and your family.”

Wal-Mart’s reversal came as shock to Shank.

“I thought it was an April Fool’s joke,” he told CNN.

“I (would) just like to let them know that they did the right thing. I just wish it hadn’t taken so long,” Shank said. “But I thank them and I hope they come through with all that they said they’re going to do.