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Mark DeBofsky spoke at the ABA ERISA Litigation
conference held on November 6-7, 2008, in
Chicago, Illinois. He presented the
Plaintiff's side in a seminar called, "Special Topics in
Welfare Litigation."
posted 11/7/2008
Mark DeBofsky spoke at the 39th Annual Meeting of
the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law at a
workshop called "Detection of Malingering Disability
Evaluations" on October 25, 2008 at the Westin in
Seattle, Washington.
posted 10/25/2008
On September 25, 2008, Mark
DeBofsky spoke on a panel about Supreme
Court ERISA Litigaiton Issues. The panel was
presented by The John Marshall Law School Center for Tax
Law and Employee Benefits.
posted 9/25/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
September 8, 2008:
Appeals court clarifies factors for fee awards.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 9/9/2008
Mark DeBofsky's article, "Mediating
in the Appellate Court" was published in this
summer's ABA Litigation magazine, 34 Litigation 4
(Summer 2008).
Brady v. Astrue, No. 08-cv-374 (N.D. GA. Aug.
28, 2008).
The government declined to brief the case, but
instead agreed to a voluntary remand. This
occurred after the case had been briefed for district
court by Daley, DeBofsky and Bryant. Ms. Brady was
represented by Marcie E. Goldbloom.
Craft v. Astrue, 539 F.3d 668
(7th Cir. Aug. 22, 2008).
The Seventh Circuit remanded this case because
the ALJ: failed to apply the special technique and
properly evaluate Plaintiff's mental limitations, which
adversely affected the RFC finding and hypotheticals;
erroneously found Plaintiff capable of simple, unskilled
work, which is vague and fails to account for all of the
evidence of record; merely recited the medical evidence
of record, but failed to properly weigh it and trace a
path from the evidence to his conclusions; failed to
consider his lack of finances when holding a lack of
treatment against him, contrary to SSR 96-7p; wrongly
found Plaintiff's subjective complaints were not
documented in the medical record; ignored Plaintiff's
testimony as to how he performed his daily activities;
failed to properly explore all potential inconsistencies
between the VE's testimony and the DOT. Mr. Craft was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Heather Aloe.
Washnieski v. Astrue, No. 07-cv-598
(E.D. Wisc. Aug. 22, 2008).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ failed to conduct a
function-by-function assessment of Plaintiff's
abilities, as required by SSR 96-8p, and failed to
inquire as to any conflicts, as required by SSR 00-4p. Mr. Washnieski was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Suzanne Blaz.
posted 9/7/2008
Wilson v. Astrue, No. 08-cv-10286
(E.D. Mich. Aug. 18, 2008).
The government declined to brief the case, but
instead agreed to a voluntary remand. This occurred
after the case had been briefed for district court by
Daley, DeBofsky and Bryant. Mr. Wilson was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Marcie E. Goldbloom and Kate Hoppe.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
August 18, 2008:
Judge sees importance of discovery ruling.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 8/19/2008
Hart
v. Astrue, No. 08-C-0007 (W.D.
Wisc. Aug. 11,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ made a
conclusory credibility finding that fails to follow SSR
96-7p and properly consider all of the evidence, and
took an overly simplistic view of the treating opinions,
failing to properly consider their statements. The
Court complained that ALJ Schneider's decisions
continually fail to be well-reasoned. Ms.
Hart was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
posted 8/13/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
August 4, 2008:
Ruling underscores value of treating doctor's opinion.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 8/4/2008
Smith v. Astrue, No. 07-C-588 (N.D.
Ind.
July 29,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ failed to
properly specify the reasons for his credibility
determination, failed to consider all of the relevant
evidence and did not trace a path from the evidence to
his conclusions resulting in an erroneous RFC and
hypotheticals, thus, resulting in erroneous VE testimony. Mr.
Smith was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Kim Jones.
posted 7/31/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
July 21, 2008:
Bankruptcy Omission Led to Estoppel.
Click on the
link to read the article.
Adams v. Astrue, No. 07-cv-2201
(C.D. IL July 17, 2008).
The government declined to brief the case, but
instead agreed to a voluntary remand. This occurred
after the case had been briefed for district court by
Daley, DeBofsky and Bryant. Mr. Adams was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
law clerk Suzanne Blaz.
posted 7/23/2008
Gardner v. Astrue, No. 07-C-5083 (N.D.
Ill.
July 15,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ's
hypotheticals to the VE were flawed, indicating that the
ALJ did not clarify with the VE why Plaintiff could
perform light work with limitations to 4 hours of
walking and standing and finding that the ALJ improperly
distilled Plaintiff's mental limitations into the
ability to perform simple, routine tasks, which was not
supported by any medical opinion of record. Mr. Gardner was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Kate Hoppe and Suzanne Blaz.
Grieves v. Astrue, No. 07-C-4404 (N.D.
Ill.
July 11,
2008). The
Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ:
failed to make a proper credibility determination
pursuant to SSR 96-7p, failing to consider Plaintiff's
pain medication side-effects, wrongly construing her
daily activities against her credibility, drawing
unsupported inferences from the record and failing to
fully and fairly develop the record; and he improperly
discounted the treating physician’s opinion by playing
doctor, making his own RFC assessment and only
addressing that evidence which supported his ultimate
RFC finding. Ms. Grieves was
represented by Marcie E. Goldbloom with
assistance from Kate Hoppe and Suzanne Blaz.
posted 7/16/2008
Mark DeBofsky spoke at the Million Dollar
Roundtable Foundation's Annual Meeting, which took place
in Toronto, Canada from June 22nd through June 26th.
posted 6/27/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
June 23, 2008:
Ruling means end for lenient regime of reviews.
Click on the
link to read the article.
Raflik v. Astrue, No. 07-C-854 (E.D.Wisc.
June 17,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ failed to
inquire as to whether the VE's testimony conflicted with
the DOT pursuant to SSR 00-4p. Ms. Raflik was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
posted 6/24/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
June 9, 2008:
Ruling shows problems with review system.
Click on the
link to read the article.
Evans v. Astrue, No. 07-C-290 (N.D.
Ind.
June 2,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ failed to
build a bridge from the evidence to his RFC conclusions
and failed to discuss the specific duties involved in
Plaintiff's prior job or assess her ability to perform
those specific tasks. Ms. Evans was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Kate Hoppe and Suzanne Blaz.
posted 6/9/2008
On Friday, June 6, 2008, Mark DeBofsky spoke about Subrogation and Reimbursement at the 22nd
Annual National Institute on ERISA Basics, which was
held in Chicago, Illinois from June 4th through June
6th.
posted 6/6/2008
Pfeiffer v. Astrue, No. 07-C-566 (W.D.
Wisc.
May 30,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ failed to
properly weigh the medical opinions of record, which the
Court noted showed greater limitations than the ALJ
found. Additionally, the Court noted that the ALJ
inappropriately dismissed the opinion of Plaintiff's
psychotherapist, contrary to SSR 06-3p, as an
unacceptable medical source and failed to follow SSR
00-4p and verify that the VE's testimoy was consistent
with the DOT. Mr. Pfeiffer was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Heather Aloe.
posted 5/30/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
May 19, 2008:
Offset Ruling Beneficial to Claimants.
Click on the
link to read the article.
On Wednesday, May 21, 2008, Mark DeBofsky spoke
during a 90-minute ABA TIPS teleconference about,
"Mental Illness Clauses in Disability Income Insurance
Policies." The program will be teleconferenced
from George Washington University Law School in
Washington, D.C.
posted 5/21/2008
Dillon v. Astrue, No. 07-C-3652 (N.D. Ill.
May 8,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ: improperly
considered Plaintiff's alcohol addiction prior to
finding him not disabled; failed to sufficiently explain
his reasons for rejecting a treating doctor's opinion;
selectively relied on parts of a State agency opinion
while ignoring other mental limitations noted in the
MRFC; and erroneously relied upon the Medical-Vocational
Grids and should have, at a minimum, called upon a
Vocational Expert. The Court also found troubling
the ALJ's dismissal of an examining opinion merely
because Plaintiff's attorney had arranged for the
evaluation. Mr. Dillon was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Kim Jones and Suzanne Blaz.
posted 5/9/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
April 28, 2008:
Court prevents review of doctor's report.
Click on the
link to read the article.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's 50th annual Law Day issue on
April 26, 2008:
The year in employee benefits.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 4/28/2008
Hill v. Astrue, No. 07-C-200 (N.D. Ind. Apr. 16,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ's
conclusion that Ms. Hill could perform light work is not
supported by substantial evidence, the determination as
to the height and length of her elevation of her foot
was unsupported, the ALJ's reasons for finding Ms. Hill
not credible are contrary to SSR 96-7p and unpersuasive
and the ALJ failed to follow SSR 00-4p. Ms. Hill was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
April 14, 2008:
Court finds conflict in insurer, reviewer relationship.
Click on the
link to read the article.
On Thursday, May 15, 2008, Frederick J. Daley
presented with Barry Schultz a talk about recent
Federal Court Social Security cases at the Chicago Bar
Association's Social Security disability law meeting.
White v.
Astrue, No. 06-C-5610 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 10,
2008). The Court
issued a remand in this case because the ALJ failed to
follow the Appeals Council's remand instructions, failed
to follow SSR 96-7p and make a proper credibility
determination, improperly dismissed Mr. White's memory
problems and erroneously found him capable of performing
past work despite numerous conflicts between the jobs'
demands and his RFC opinion. Mr. White was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Kate Hoppe and Suzanne Blaz.
posted 4/16/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
March 31, 2008:
Struggle over 'mental illness' exclusions.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 4/1/2008
Juszynski
v. LINA, No. 06-C-5503 (N.D. Ill.
Mar. 28, 2008). The
Court granted summary judgment in this
case noting that the totality of the evidence favored
continuation, not termination, of Mr. Juszynski's LTD
benefits and that LINA selectively reviewed the evidence
when it chose to terminate benefits by disregarding
consistent and largely uncontradicted treatment records. Mr.
Juszynski was represented by Mark DeBofsky.
posted 3/31/2008
Maki v.
Astrue, No. 2:07-C-282 (E.D. Wisc. Mar.
18, 2008). The
Court issued a remand in this
case because the ALJ: erroneously found the
treating doctor’s assessment inconsistent with Ms.
Maki’s work activity; erroneously held attempting to
work against Ms. Maki when her attempt to work only
further supports her allegations of disability; failed
to properly discuss, assess and weigh all of the medical
evidence as instructed by the Appeals Council; failed to
adequately consider whether Ms. Maki met or equaled
Listing 1.04A; did not follow the requirements of the
Appeals Council regarding assessing Ms. Maki’s mental
impairments; failed to trace a path from the evidence to
the RFC conclusions, failing to make a proper RFC
determination pursuant to SSR 96-8p; failed to provide
the frequency of Ms. Maki’s sit-stand option as required
by SSR 96-9p; and failed to meet his burden at step five
of the sequential evaluation. Ms. Maki was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Suzanne Blaz.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
March 17, 2008:
Court Nixes Insurer Offset for Dependent SSA Benefits.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 3/18/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
March 3, 2008:
Rulings uphold State power over review clauses.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 3/3/2008
Paska v. Astrue, No. 07-C-3447 (N.D.
Ill.
Feb. 6, 2008). The
Court issued a remand in this
case because the ALJ:
erred by ignoring medical evidence and GAF scores
suggestive of greater mental limitations, thus, failing
to comply with the requirement that she fully and fairly
evaluate all of the medical evidence in the record and
adversely affecting the credibility determination;
inappropriately held Plaintiff’s going out for
disability related appointments and obtaining help from
his friends against his allegations of disabling mental
limitations; failed to properly build a bridge from the
evidence to his findings; and erroneously made
hypotheticals without relying on any medical opinion or
report. Mr. Paska was represented by Frederick
J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
February 11, 2008:
A Painful Burden For Disability Claimants.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 2/28/2008
Kohel v. Astrue, No. 07-C-528 (E.D. Wisc.
Feb. 1, 2008). The
Court issued a remand in this
case because the ALJ: failed to properly consider
Plaintiff's nebulizer use and how often it would cause
him to be off task; failed to provide reasons to resolve
discrepancies between reports he credited; failed to
state what weight he gave to a consultative examiner's
report; failed to provide specific reasons as to why
Plaintiff was not credible; and failed to properly
develop the evidence regarding Plaintiff's previously
acquired job skills to properly determine whether any
were transferable. Mr. Kohel was represented by Frederick
J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from Heather Aloe
and Suzanne Blaz.
Rodriguez v. Astrue, No. 07-C-186 (N.D.
Ill. Jan. 29, 2008).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ:
failed to follow SSR 82-61 by failing to take notice of
the conflicts between the VE’s testimony and the DOT and
by failing to resolve the apparent inconsistencies
between the RFC and functional demands and job duties of
can sorting as generally required throughout the
national economy; and by failing to follow SSR 00-4p
when determining that there were other jobs Plaintiff
could purportedly perform in the current national
economy. Mr. Rodriguez was
represented by Marcie E. Goldbloom with
assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
posted 2/1/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
January 28, 2008:
10th Circuit sticks to 'review proceeding'.
Click on the
link to read the article.
Szczecina v. Astrue, No. 1:07-C-252 (D.
CO Jan. 24, 2008).
The Court issued a remand in
this case. Ms. Szczecina was represented by
Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Violet Borowski and Heather Aloe.
posted 1/28/2008
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
January 21, 2008:
Occupation review should look into the past.
Click on the
link to read the article.
On January 23, 2008, David A. Bryant spoke about
ERISA, Medicare, Social Security and Long-Term Care
Insurance law as part of a seminar called, "Medicare and
Elder Law: Representing Clients in a New Legal Landscape
in Illinois." The seminar took place in Itasca,
Illinois and was presented by Lorman Education Services.
posted 1/23/2008
Mark DeBofsky wrote an article that was published
in the John Marshall Law Review entitled "What process
is due in the adjudication of
ERISA claims?" Click
here to read the article.
posted 1/15/2008
Whisenant v. Astrue, No. 1:06-C-5322
(N.D. IL Jan. 10, 2008).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ: erred in
finding Whisenant’s subjective complaints of pain not
credible without explaining her reasons for discrediting
the medical reports of neuropathy and fibromyalgia;
failed to take into account the written observation of
Whisenant’s seizure; failed to build a bridge from the
evidence to her conclusions; and, as a result of the
above errors, failed to pose accurate hypotheticals to
the VE. Ms. Whisenant was represented by Frederick
J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from Marcie E.
Goldbloom and Suzanne Blaz.
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
January 7, 2008:
Wrongly used standard can deny worthy benefits.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 1/10/2008
David A. Bryant presented, "How to Market
Yourself and Your Practice More Effectively" with Scott
Elkind in a national teleconference presented by Lorman
Education Services.
posted 12/13/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
November 26, 2007:
Examining the nature of illness and injury.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 11/27/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
November 12, 2007:
Credibility should have been the issue in review.
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 11/12/2007
Carl v. Astrue, No. 07-C-209 (W.D. WI
Nov. 7, 2007). The
Court issued a remand in this
case because the ALJ: failed to appropriately
consider and weigh the opinions of Plaintiff’s treating
physicians and discounted their opinions without
substantial evidence in support; failed to consider all
of the evidence provided to him and failed to build a
bridge from the evidence to his conclusions; made an
inadequate credibility finding that failed to follow SSR
96-7p and improperly considered daily activities that
were minimal at best; and failed to properly assess
Plaintiff’s mental limitations and incorporate them into
the RFC and hypotheticals. Ms. Carl was represented by
Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Heather Aloe.
posted 11/2/2007
Zimpfer v. Astrue, No. 3:06-C-704 (N.D.
IN Nov. 2, 2007).
The Court issued a remand in
this case because the ALJ failed to make a proper
credibility determination supported by substantial
evidence, which made the ALJ's RFC and Step 5 findings
inherently flawed. Ms. Zimpfer was represented
by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Suzanne Blaz.
Ruiz v. Astrue, No. 05-C-6098 (N.D. IL
Oct. 30, 2007). The Court issued a remand in this case
because the ALJ: failed to explain her RFC determination
and trace a path from the evidence to her conclusions;
erred in finding Ms. Ruiz capable of her past work as a
nursing coordinator because she did not inquire into the
demands of that position; and failed to follow SSR 96-7p
and make a proper credibility determination. Ms.
Ruiz was represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr.
with assistance from Suzanne Blaz.
posted 11/2/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
October 29, 2007:
Benefit plan took the necessary steps
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 10/29/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
October 15, 2007:
Court refuses to rubber-stamp denial
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 10/16/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
October 1, 2007:
Line between 'job' and 'occupation'
Click on the
link to read the article.
Khoury v. Astrue, Case No.: 1:04-cv-05452
(N.D. Ill. Sept. 30, 2007).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ: failed to give
specific reasons for his credibility finding and failed
to follow SSR 96-7p by obtaining and considering
evidence that would shed light on Mr. Khoury's
credibility; failed to follow SSR 004-p; and failed to
supply VE data to counsel. Mr. Khoury was
represented by Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with
assistance from Violet Borowski and Heather
Aloe.
posted 10/2/2007
Marshall v. Astrue, No. 2:06-C-0264 (N.D.
IN Sept. 25, 2007).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ made an erroneous
credibility finding, failed to evaluate MRFC by failing
to perform a special technique, and did not properly
examine the requirements of Ms. Marshall's past work at
Step Four. The Court mandates that the ALJ include a
Step Five determination on remand, and also suggested
that the ALJ get an MSS from the CE to further
illuminate the extent of Ms. Marshall's mental
limitations. Ms. Marshall was represented by
Frederick J. Daley, Jr. with assistance from
Violet Borowski and Suzanne Blaz.
Underwood v. Astrue,
No. 1:07-C-0001 (N.D. IL Sept. 20, 2007).
The Court issued a
remand in this case because the ALJ failed to include
all Ms. Underwood's mental limitations into the RFC and
hypotheticals resulting in erroneous VE testimony.
Ms. Underwood was represented by Frederick J.
Daley, Jr. with assistance from Violet Borowski
and Suzanne Blaz.
posted 9/26/2007
The following article by
Mark DeBofsky appeared in the Chicago Daily Law
Bulletin's Workplace Issues section on
September 17, 2007:
7th Circuit Ruling puts ERISA litigation back on track
Click on the
link to read the article.
posted 9/17/2007
David A. Bryant presented, "Everything
You Need to Know about Medicare, ERISA and Social
Security Issues" on September 7, 2007 at the UBS
Tower in Springfield.
posted 9/7/2007
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