Barbara
Enloe Hadsell
Barbara
Enloe Hadsell is a 1978 graduate of the University of California,
Los Angeles School of Law, and holds a Masters Degree in
English Literature. Since founding the Hadsell & Stormer
law firm in 1991 with Dan Stormer, her partner from a prior
law firm, Ms. Hadsell has maintained a varied practice. She
has litigated in the areas of civil rights, constitutional
and international human rights law for many years in both
state and federal courts. In the frequent instances where
her firm co-counsels complex litigation involving teams of
attorneys, Ms. Hadsell routinely has been designated by her
peers as lead counsel, either singly or as one of a select
team of more experienced litigators.
Ms. Hadsell represents large numbers of Plaintiffs in the area of labor law in complex
wage and hour class action matters such as Flores v. Albertson’s (a
case brought by a class of thousands of janitors against California’s
major supermarket chains), Hernandez v. Tyco International
(U.S.), Inc., BC 315749 (designated a "complex matter" and
currently pending in Los Angeles Superior Court), and Carmen
Sandoval, et al. v. Interim Services, et al., BC 236636.
Among the many unique cases Ms. Hadsell has litigated are novel
slumlord actions, including: Pineda vs. Wallman, BC245543
[stating claims on behalf of nearly 120 individuals for wrongful
death and personal injury against the owners of a Los Angeles
apartment building. The complex collapsed due to rot and mold
caused by excessive moisture and termite damage occasioned by
the owners' neglect and conscious disregard; one tenant died
and over 100 others were injured, displaced and suffered significant
property and earnings loss]; Casteneda v. Avol [a rather
notorious case of first impression against a psychiatrist, Milton
Avol, for his slumlord practices in which the then - novel court
- ordered relief included compelling Mr. Avol to live in one
of his substandard premises with a monitor
"shackled" to his ankles for a specified period of
time]; and Antonia Leon Roman v. Mervin Kurtzman, C
600 773 [a wrongful death and personal injury action in which
Ms. Hadsell represented nine plaintiffs, many of them severely
burned and traumatized, against the owners of an apartment complex
in which an arson fire killed four members of their garment district
family]. Indeed, Ms. Hadsell tried the seminal slumlord case, Hernandez
v. Stabach, in which she represented nearly 30 families
in a three month long trial which set many of the parameters
for such litigation for years to come.
Ms. Hadsell has represented farm workers in labor disputes and
various legal aid, grass roots citizens’ groups and public
interest organizations in "SLAPP suits" filed against
them.
Currently among the most complex matters in her portfolio of
cases is a Northern California District Court case in which she
is co-lead counsel overseeing the effort of a team of over 20
lawyers from around the country. The action states claims on
behalf of Nigerian villagers against global giant Chevron for
its involvement in deaths and other human rights abuses occurring
in the rich oil producing region of the Niger Delta following
environmental protests [Bowoto v. Chevron, C99 - 02506
SI]. In connection with that matter, plaintiffs’ attorneys
have made at least 30 trips to Nigeria to conduct depositions;
Ms. Hadsell has traveled there twice personally for lengthy periods
to depose personnel of Chevron’s subsidiary, Chevron Nigeria
Ltd. Additionally, the team has conducted depositions in England,
South Africa, Switzerland and throughout the United States. Ms.
Hadsell has been personally involved in conducting many of these
depositions. Trial in that matter is set for April 2007 in United
States District Court in San Francisco.
In a companion state case pending in San Francisco Superior Court
[Bowoto v. Chevron, CGC-03-417580], Ms. Hadsell and
the team of plaintiffs’ attorneys represent Nigerians and
a class of California consumers seeking damages and injunctive
relief against Chevron for misrepresentations regarding its oil
production activities in Nigeria, pursuant to B&P 17200,
et seq.
Ms. Hadsell has litigated many employment discrimination, harassment,
retaliation and whistleblower cases, with settlements totaling
in the many millions of dollars. Her trial skills were portrayed
by Hollywood in Hostile Intent. This movie concerns
one of her early employment discrimination cases, brought in
the United States District Court, Central District on behalf
of two female police officers. In it, Ms. Hadsell obtained a
nearly $4 million judgment from the City of Long Beach, the highest
award ever at the time for a sex harassment case in which no
punitive damages were available. [Lindsey Allison and Melissa
Clerkin v. City of Long Beach, CV89 -3240 RG].
Included among the many other employment cases Ms. Hadsell has
litigated are Lynda Vitale v. City of Long Beach, BC126134
[in which she represented the first attorney nationwide to utilize
the battered woman syndrome defense in a murder trial in her
own claims for sex discrimination and harassment against the
Long Beach City Prosecutor’s office], and Edith Lopez
v. City of Alhambra, et al, BC 209442 [in which Ms. Hadsell
represented a Latina police sergeant in her claims of sex discrimination,
harassment and retaliation, and obtained a large settlement and
injunctive relief in the form of her promotion to the position
of Lieutenant].
Ms. Hadsell has received numerous awards concerning her work.
The California Women’s Law Center selected Ms. Hadsell
and her partner, Dan Stormer, as the first ever honorees of its
now annual Pursuit of Justice Award, in recognition of what the
organization characterized as their "cutting edge efforts
in the area of protecting the rights of women and minorities."
Ms. Hadsell has been cited by The National Law Journal as one
of America’s Top 50 Women Litigators. In May 2006, The
Impact Fund, one of the nation’s leading foundations providing
broad support for complex public interest litigation in the areas
of civil rights, environmental justice and poverty law, honored
her as co-lead counsel and part of a team of 24 attorneys in Flores
v. Albertson's, CV 01 - 0515 PA. Flores was a statewide
federal class action filed on behalf of several thousand monolingual
Spanish speaking janitors against Albertson’s, Vons, Safeway
and Ralphs for wage and hour violations; the case settled for
in excess of $22 million in 2005 on the eve of trial.
Ms. Hadsell repeatedly has been recognized as a “Super
Lawyer”
in “Southern California Super Lawyers,” published
by Los Angeles Magazine and Law & Politics Magazine. The
same publication has consistently listed Ms. Hadsell as both
one of the top 100 lawyers and one of the top 50 female lawyers
in Southern California. In June 2006, the Los Angeles and San
Francisco Daily Journals cited Ms. Hadsell as one of the state’s
top 75 female litigators. In September 2006, Ms. Hadsell was
selected to be included in the 2007 edition of The Best Lawyers
in America in the specialties of Labor and Employment Law.
Ms. Hadsell has appeared in dozens of panels before bar associations,
conferences, and at conventions. She was asked to participate
in the Ninth Circuit's Gender Discrimination Task Force and has
presented at "Arguments of the Masters" and "Legends
of Litigation."
Ms. Hadsell is frequently asked to speak at law schools and citizens’
organizations.
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