February 11, 2009 4:33 PM

TB Traveler Hit With $1.3M Lawsuit

(AP)  Nine people filed a $1.3 million lawsuit Thursday against the globe-trotting tuberculosis patient for possibly exposing them to the disease on a commercial flight from Prague to Montreal.

Montreal lawyer Anlac Nguyen filed the motion in Quebec Superior Court on behalf of seven Canadians and two natives of the Czech Republic. Eight were passengers on the flight with Andrew Speaker and the ninth is a brother and roommate of one of the passengers.

Speaker, a 31-year-old Atlanta personal injuries attorney, was in Europe when he learned tests showed he had an extremely drug-resistant strain of tuberculosis known as XDR-TB.

Despite warnings from health officials not to board another international flight, Speaker took a Czech state-run CSA jetliner to Montreal in early May as part of his return trip home. He subsequently became the first American quarantined by the federal government since 1963, and is currently undergoing treatment under isolation in a Denver hospital.

Health officials now say Speaker's strain of TB is not the extremely drug resistant kind but a more treatable, multi-drug-resistant form of the disease. They say tests so far indicate his risk of spreading the infection are low.

"They do not have tuberculosis, but nobody can say that they won't have tuberculosis either," Nguyen said of his clients. "And that will not be known, not now, not next year, but for many years in the future, so the pain and suffering that the people have gone through are real. They continue to suffer now because of the uncertainty."

While in Rome, Speaker said he was advised by a CDC official that test results indicated he had extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, or XDR-TB, and should either go into isolation at an Italian hospital or pay for a private air ambulance to return to the U.S.

Speaker is being treated in isolation at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver. Contacted by telephone, Speaker said he has not hired an attorney. He said he is concentrating on his treatment and will worry about any legal ramifications when he returns to his home in Atlanta.

"Honestly, right now, I'm going to have all that kind of stuff to think about when I get home," he said. "Right now, I want to worry about my treatment and get home. I do hope that no one contracted this."

Speaker's father Ted - a lawyer who founded the Atlanta firm where his son works - said they would wait until the lawsuit is served before responding.

"When they do serve him, we will be replying to it," said Ted Speaker, who added that he was not surprised by the lawsuit.

Nassim Tabri sat one row in front of Speaker. Tabri, a 26-year-old Montreal graduate student, found out about his possible exposure when a reporter called him after news of the incident broke last month.

He is seeking $134,900 - the highest amount sought among the nine plaintiffs, mostly for pain, suffering and "loss of opportunities".

"At the very first moment that I found out, I was obviously very stressed, very shocked," said Tabri, who slept through most of the flight. "I'm still very stressed out about it. He deliberately got on this plane, endangered our lives and this is very selfish and reckless behavior that deserves to be punished."

Nguyen said one of the plaintiffs, a 72-year-old man, tested positive for tuberculosis in an initial skin test, but it was unclear if it was related to contact with Speaker.

Health experts caution that TB skin tests can yield false-positive results and that further tests are required.

The man now lives in a separate room from his wife, according to the motion.

Public Health Agency of Canada spokesman Alain Desroches said "at this point there is no evidence that any one on the flight contracted TB from Andrew Speaker."

Tabri said he had a negative test for tuberculosis, which he said meant only that he had not been exposed to the disease prior to his contact with Speaker. Tabri said that he anxiously awaits results of further tests within a month.

"His life has gone through the greatest turmoil," Nguyen said. "He has had to change all his academic plans."

Nguyen said he expects Speaker will be served by a bailiff within the next five to 10 days.
By Sean Farrell

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 71 Comments
by ndg1979 July 14, 2007 4:20 AM EDT
With Speaker's medical bills mounting by the day, these people will be lucky to see a penny from him. I don't think he has a million and a half just laying around for others.

People with severe dieseases that require quarantine from the general population should be much more closely monitored, especially when travel, or the risk thereof, could occur.
Reply to this comment
by markychv July 14, 2007 2:17 AM EDT
I hope these people get every cent from this pathetic and UNSYMPATHETIC person. Truth be told, he didnt give a *** about anyone but himself, he is a lawyer and his dad is in a position of power, he did whatever the hell he wanted to do without concern for others, to me that is the lowest human being there could possibly be, he AND his father should be taken to the cleaners for this!!! Both have messed up egos that THINK it gives them a right to do anything they want without regard to anyone but themselves. Listen up everyone ....THIS IS WHAT IS WRONG WITH OUR WORLD, PEOPLE LIKE THIS PIECE OF *** RUNNING AROUND ON THE LOOSE!!! Im just glad he is in a hospital now, I could care less what happens to this ******, Im just glad he cannot put more people at risk. If you ask me, a human sould was wasted on this ***! Ok not nearly enough said ....but whew!
Reply to this comment
by adian1-2009 July 13, 2007 9:14 PM EDT
The guy is an attorney. The guy has been told about the possible --maybe probable-- consequences if he travels by plane. The guy, as a lawyer, deals precisely with tort law (damages, negligence, liability, etc.). But. . . he could not care less. He just boarded the plane where lots of other innocent passengers are traveling. Come on! The guy deserves a nice disbarment proceeding, first, and to be whipped with a nice judgment making him liable for all the mental suffering he has caused. It just boils in my mind that his behavior is not only grossly negligent, buy also criminal behavior.
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by donteplays July 13, 2007 6:42 PM EDT
This guy is no better than those scumbags who deliberately pass on HIV/AIDS to unsuspecting partners just because they are bitter......this is revolting
Reply to this comment
by smb221 July 13, 2007 6:18 PM EDT
I think you may well be right. Dying by drowning on your own blood after months of pain, fevers, weight loss and weakness as as your lungs hemorrhage and you cough up blood in an attempt to breath - that's the risk this muderous scumbag exposed people to. And he did it deliberately and knowingly, taking steps to avoid the "no fly" list he was on.

And some people try to excuse this. No wonder our society is ******.
Posted by jimibear at 02:21 PM : Jul 13, 2007

I couldn't agree more!
Reply to this comment
by erasmus6 July 13, 2007 6:13 PM EDT
dr.putt45

"Who gives a ***The people suing this guy are not from the US, but they want to make money off him. What about the few thousand US citizens exposed in his travels after entering the US."

Ahh, another selfish person like Speaker.

We in Canada take a dim view of him sneaking through OUR country to get home. And as far as exposing THOUSANDS of US citizens AFTER entering the US, that is highly unlikely. He crossed the border in a car and drove to where he was going and the CDC picked him up and escorted him from there.

In Canada, we are not as sue happy as the US. I do not believe it is for the money. This will be causing those people a great amount of stress. Like jimibear said, these people will not know for months whether they have TB or not, in fact I think the article said it could be a year or more. This isn't like some cold where you know in a few days. Could you imagine going a year not knowing? There will be people that will have nothing to do with them because they will be afraid of getting it.

susieq_13

"It's not his fault for having TB."

No it isn't, but it is his fault for exposing others. GET A FRICKIN'BRAIN!!

There may be some doubt in whether Speaker new whether he was contagious before he went to Europe (which I doubt very much) but he DID know after he was in Europe. And whether he was extremely contagious or not, TB IS STILL CONTAGIOUS!

I am a person that normally does NOT believe in suing but I say: SUE THE B-A-S-T-A-R-D!!
Reply to this comment
by jimibear July 13, 2007 5:56 PM EDT
"passerby2

hahaha, actually I don't have a prick, I am a girl.
Posted by erasmus6 at 02:43 PM : Jul 13, 2007
+ report abuse"

Don't worry, ras ... that just means you can get as many pricks as you want! ;-)
Reply to this comment
by retmilspouse July 13, 2007 5:48 PM EDT
Posted by jimibear at 02:21 PM : Jul 13, 2007

Amen brother.
Reply to this comment
by erasmus6 July 13, 2007 5:43 PM EDT
passerby2

hahaha, actually I don't have a prick, I am a girl.
Reply to this comment
by jimibear July 13, 2007 5:21 PM EDT
"Are these people reading the same article that we are? I think the fact that TB has been out of the limelight for so many years has these morons immune to the facts of this disease. There are things that you can and cannot do in life if you have been exposed to someone who is actively infected with this disease. These nuts need to research the reason it was called Consumption back in the old days.
Posted by retmilspouse at 01:17 PM : Jul 13, 2007"

I think you may well be right. Dying by drowning on your own blood after months of pain, fevers, weight loss and weakness as as your lungs hemorrhage and you cough up blood in an attempt to breath - that's the risk this muderous scumbag exposed people to. And he did it deliberately and knowingly, taking steps to avoid the "no fly" list he was on.

And some people try to excuse this. No wonder our society is ******.
Reply to this comment
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