[wordup] Followup to Kasky Vs Nike lawsuit (corporate personhood)

Adam Shand adam at shand.net
Thu Sep 25 20:02:10 EDT 2003


Via: .silver (exCORAL015+1200hr) <silver at geekflat.net>
From: http://reclaimdemocracy.org/nike/nike_settles_lawsuit.html

Kasky v. Nike Inc. Settled
Participants Pleased, Many Activists Inflamed

September 12, 2003

Editors' Note: When we first issued a press release on this page on the 
day of the settlement, it was rushed and we presented the settlement in 
overly positive terms. The updated report here is a more informed 
analysis that reflects more thorough information (though there is still 
much we do not know).

Kasky v. Nike, a lawsuit that began with a false advertising claim and 
went on to become a U.S. Supreme Court case that explored a 
corporation's claim to a constitutional right to lie, has concluded.

On September 12, Marc Kasky and Nike Inc. announced a settlement 
stipulating that Nike will pay $1.5 million (about half of one day's 
advertising budget) to the Washington, D.C.-based Fair Labor Association 
(FLA) for "program operations and worker development programs focused on 
education and economic opportunity." Nike and other corporations accused 
of "sweatshop" practives hold several seats on the board of directors 
and wield effective veto power over any organizational activity.

Neither party would confirm that Nike paid Kasky's legal team for their 
five years of work on the case, but a settlement that did not compensate 
them is unlikely, given Nike's loss at the U.S. Supreme Court in June. 
While the Court did not issue a substantive ruling on Nike's 
constitutional claims, it rejected Nike's pre-emptive appeal and 
remanded the case to a trial court on the merits of Kasky's 
complaint--that Nike lied to the public about its "sweatshop" practices 
in the course of a major PR campaign.

So what's our view? Well, there was little chance of Nike willingly 
going back to trial without making a major effort to settle, due to 
continuing bad publicity that Nike has received, both from labor groups 
criticizing its worker treatment and from ReclaimDemocracy.org and 
others assailing its attempts to subvert our Constitution to serve 
corporate ends.

In light of this, the settlement amount is surprisingly low. For a 
company with $10.7 billion in annual sales, it's a pittance. After 5 
years of litigation, Marc Kasky and his legal team doubtless were eager 
to move on, but the settlement seems lopsided.

More disturbing to many people than the amount, however, is the 
recipient, and the fact that Nike now escapes the discovery process, 
which many human rights activists have long seen as their golden 
opportunity to gain critical information about Nike's practices.

Despite an unsatisfying conclusion, the Kasky v. Nike case had many 
positive impacts in its 5-year lifespan. While we share many labor 
advocates frustration with the settlement and we pushed for the unlikely 
scenario of the U.S. Supreme Court making a landmark ruling against 
corporate claims to Bill of Rights protections, we feared a negative 
(for us) ruling was more likely, and were pleased to have the Supreme 
Court let the case go to (the averted) trial.

The tough California law requiring truth in communications from 
corporations doing business in the state was upheld by the state Supreme 
Court and Nike's attempts to challenge the law failed.

ReclaimDemocracy.org played a prominent role in publicizing this case 
nationally and was party to an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court on 
behalf of Marc Kasky. We joined with numerous public interest groups and 
other parties in bringing light to this case, including Educating for 
Justice, Press for Change, Global Exchange, Citizen Works, Domini Social 
Investments, several U.S. Representatives.

Perhaps most importantly, the case served as a valuable tool for us and 
several of our allies to reach a national audience with challenges to 
corporate claims on constitutional rights.

Kasky v. Nike is gone, but the case illuminated a growing conflict that 
only will escalate in the months and years ahead. Within weeks, you'll 
be hearing more from us about a related case involving a lawsuit by the 
Monsanto Corporation. The struggle goes on.



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