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Suit Charges 'Inhumane' Questions at Med-Mal Deposition

By Lisa Brennan
August 30, 2007

Rough spots are common on the road of civil litigation, but it's not every day that a plaintiff's attorney sues his adversary for asking 'inhumane' questions during a deposition that allegedly inflict 'grievous emotional distress.' That's the thrust of a suit filed July 11 in Essex County, NJ, in which Bruce Nagel claims Judith Wahrenberger, his adversary in a medical malpractice case, acted tortiously by asking a husband whether he felt his wife had played a role in the death of their infant daughter by handling the child roughly. 'Wahrenberger's unsupported and intentional attack upon the parents was beyond any acceptable behavior of a civilized human being,' alleges Nagel, of Nagel Rice in Roseland, NJ.

The Deposition

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