Shareholder News

Aaron Olsen Promoted To Partner

Haeggquist & Eck has promoted attorney Aaron Olsen, who earlier this year served as co-lead class counsel in litigation against Donald Trump and Trump University, to partner, the firm has announced. The promotion took effect January 1, 2017.

A graduate of California Western School of Law, Olsen has spent the last seven years of his practice as an associate in ZHE’s employment law and consumer litigation departments. He focuses his practice on representing employees in all aspects of labor and employment litigation in federal and state courts and is experienced in prosecuting complex class action suits, including consumer fraud actions, product defect cases, wage and hour actions, and unfair competition and false advertising claims, among others. Late last year, Olsen was part of a multi-lawyer team that negotiated a $25 million settlement on behalf of students who attended Donald Trump’s Trump University. He was the first lawyer to field the phone call from and investigate the claims of Tarla Makaeff, who would eventually become the class representative in the case, and was instrumental in prosecuting the nearly seven-year litigation against Trump and his company.

Olsen has obtained millions of dollars in damages for his individual employee clients and has negotiated hundreds of settlements in labor and employment cases for causes of action including wrongful termination, harassment, retaliation, and misclassification. His work has also resulted in significant changes to employers’ labor practice across California, which has had a ripple effect in positively changing the lives of thousands of workers throughout the state.

Over the past few years, Olsen served as co-lead counsel for a nationwide consumer class of purchasers of an allegedly defective power adapter in a consumer product defect class action against Apple, Inc. In re MagSafe Apple Power Adapter Litig., Case No. C 09-01911 JW.  He also served as co-lead counsel for a nationwide consumer class action against Sony Electronics, Inc., which alleged fundamental flaws in the design and/or manufacturing process in the company’s VAIO Touchpad Notebooks. In Re Sony Vaio Computer Notebook Trackpad Litigation, Case No. 09-CV-02109-AJB-MDD (S.D. Cal.).

In 2011, Olsen and Haeggquist & Eck Managing Partner Alreen Haeggquist obtained a successful trial verdict on behalf of clients in a wage and hour, trade secret misappropriation, and breach of contract action. In addition to the trial verdict, ZHE persuaded the Court to find that the opposing party brought the action in bad faith, resulting in a substantial damages and attorney fee award for the firm’s clients. The judgment was affirmed in full on appeal.

Olsen was selected in 2015, 2016 and 2017 as a Super Lawyers Rising Star, an honor received by less than 2.5 percent of attorneys in California each year. He was also nominated as one of San Diego’s Outstanding Young Attorneys in 2011 and 2012.

“Aaron is a tremendous asset to the firm, and the partnership promotion rewards his incredible dedication and hard work,” Haeggquist said.

Olsen is a 2008 graduate of California Western School of Law, where she served as editor-in-chief of California Western School of Law Commentary and was an Executive Board Member of the Student Bar Association. He holds a B.A. in Business Finance from the University of Utah. Prior to joining ZHE, he was an attorney at Nicholas Boylan, APC, and served as a law clerk at Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd and the San Diego County Office of the Public Defender.

To schedule your free initial evaluation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

Aaron Olsen Named To 2016 California Rising Stars List

We are pleased to announce that Aaron Olsen has been selected to the 2016 California Rising Stars list. This is an exclusive list, recognizing no more than 2.5 percent of the lawyers in the state.

Super Lawyers, part of Thomson Reuters, is a research-driven, peer-influenced rating service of outstanding lawyers who have attained a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. Attorneys are selected from more than 70 practice areas and all firm sizes, assuring a credible and relevant annual list.

The objective of Super Lawyers is to create a credible, comprehensive and diverse listing of exceptional attorneys to be used as a resource for both attorneys and consumers seeking legal counsel.

The Super Lawyers lists are published nationwide in Super Lawyers Magazines and in leading city and regional magazines and newspapers across the country, as well as in the California Super Lawyers Digital Magazine.

Please join us in congratulating Aaron Olsen on his nomination. For more information about Super Lawyers, go to SuperLawyers.com.

To schedule your free initial evaluation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

Alreen Haeggquist Named To the 2016 California Super Lawyers List

We are pleased to announce that Managing Partner Alreen Haeggquist has been selected to the 2016 California Super Lawyers list. This is an exclusive list, recognizing no more than five percent of attorneys in the state.

Super Lawyers, part of Thomson Reuters, is a research-driven, peer influenced rating service of outstanding lawyers who have attained a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. Attorneys are selected from more than 70 practice areas and all firm sizes, assuring a credible and relevant annual list.

The annual selections are made using a patented multiphase process that includes:

• Peer nominations• Independent research by Super Lawyers• Evaluations from a highly credentialed panel of attorneys

The objective of Super Lawyers is to create a credible, comprehensive and diverse listing of exceptional attorneys to be used as a resource for both referring attorneys and consumers seeking legal counsel.

The Super Lawyers lists are published nationwide in Super Lawyers Magazines and in leading city and regional magazines and newspapers across the country, as well as the California Super Lawyers Digital Magazine.

Please join us in congratulating Alreen on her selection. For more information about Super Lawyers, go to SuperLawyers.com.

To schedule your free initial consultation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

H&E Law Featured in the San Diego Daily Transcript’s 2015 Women of Influence Special Edition

Haeggquist & Eck has gone up against some big names, including Apple, Sony and Trump University. The San Diego-based law firm represents employees who are wrongfully terminated, retaliated against, or experience workplace discrimination and harassment. In addition, the firm handles consumer fraud, securities and employment class actions.

Stepping up for people in need is a motivating force for Helen Zeldes, Alreen Haeggquist and Amber Eck.

“At our firm, we share a passion to speak up on behalf of those who don’t have a voice,” Zeldes said. “As women who live in a democratic country where we can exercise our civil rights, we feel it is a privilege to do so for our clients.”

The partners met while working at the nation’s largest plaintiff’s class-action firm, Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP (“Robbins Geller,” formerly known as “Lerach Coughlin” and “Milberg Weiss”). Zeldes and Haeggquist left to start their new practice in 2008, and Eck joined them in March 2010. The firm has since grown to six attorneys, including one of counsel, and two support staff. In June, the team will move to new offices in the NBC Building downtown. Clients are serviced nationwide depending on a practice area, such as consumer class actions and securities. Employment cases are primarily litigated in San Diego.

Clients around the country are thankful they’ve had the only all-female-partners plaintiffs’ law firm in San Diego on their side. Each partner points with pride to particular cases that had positive outcomes.

“When I was in law school at the University of Hawaii, I was a paid intern on a human-rights case on behalf of Burmese refugees. It was a very inspiring case that motivated me to do the kind of work that I do,” Zeldes said. At Robbins Geller, Zeldes and Haeggquist worked for many years in the consumer, antitrust and insurance fraud class-action practice group. Zeldes was instrumental in litigating a series of nationwide senior annuities fraud class actions in which Lerach Coughlin was appointed co-lead counsel.

At Robbins Geller, Haeggquist participated and played an instrumental role in the successful prosecution and settlement of numerous antitrust and unfair competition cases.

“Now, I primarily represent employees who have been discriminated against or harassed by their employers.” Haeggquist said. “I’m always proud when we obtain a recovery that changes the employee’s life, so they can move forward and get past the conduct they, unfortunately, had to endure.”

Eck was a partner for 12 years at Robbins Geller. She litigated many shareholders and derivative class actions, resulting in substantial recoveries for investors, and extensive corporate governance changes.

“I have had the opportunity to stand up for clients’ rights in a wide variety of situations,” said Eck, “from shareholders harmed by securities fraud, to victims of real estate investing scams, unethical timeshare practices, or other consumer scams, to employees who have been treated unlawfully and unfairly. It is often challenging, but is extremely rewarding.”

The partners credit other women for influencing their decision to pursue legal careers.

“My mom was a very strong and outspoken woman and because of her, it always occurred to me to speak up,” Zeldes said. “I come from a family with a background in activism. My grandfather was active in the civil-rights movement and my mom always encouraged us to speak up to injustice.”

“My mother also inspired me to stand up,” Haeggquist said. “However, it was her passivity — witnessing her failure to stand up when she needed to — that gave me the motivation to stand up for others, ever since I was a young girl.”

“I was fortunate to have the support and encouragement of several strong women in my career, from my law school mentor and professor Jane Cohen, to my mom and my aunt, Harvard professor and author Diana Eck, and my colleagues Anita Laing and Mary Blasy,” said Eck.

All mothers of children younger than age 11, the partners are active in their profession and the community. Zeldes serves on the advisory board of the Girls Thank Tank, which works on behalf of the homeless community in San Diego.

Haeggquist is a founding board member of GTT, is on the advisory board of GTT, on the board of Consumers Attorneys of San Diego, and is co-chairwoman of its Community Outreach Committee. Eck has been active in the legal community as a member of the Enright and Welsh Inns of Court, and in her local community as a Girl Scout leader, Deacon and GATE District Advisory Council representative.

“We create a really positive environment for ourselves and our employees,” Haeggquist said. Zeldes Haeggquist and Eck walk their talk. “We go the extra mile to take care of our employees, host special events for them and encourage our staff to join us in activities that give back to our community.”

Read Full Article PDF Here

To schedule your free initial consultation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

Plaintiffs Win Ninth Circuit Appeal Of Anti-SLAPP Motion Against Trump University

San Diego (November 27, 2013) – On April 17, 2013, the 9th Circuit issued an Order reversing the district court’s denial of an Anti-SLAPP motion to strike a defamation counterclaim filed by plaintiff Tarla Makaeff against Trump University, and today the 9th Circuit issued an Order denying Trump University’s motion for en banc review.

In April 2010, plaintiffs’ counsel Zeldes Haeggquist & Eck, LLP and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd filed a consumer class action against Trump University in federal court, alleging that Trump University made false and misleading statements in its advertising and real estate seminars in violation of state and federal laws.  In response, Trump University attempted to intimidate plaintiff Tarla Makaeff into dropping her lawsuit by filing a defamation counterclaim against her. In the defamation action, Trump University claimed that Ms. Makaeff defamed Trump University by lodging complaints with the Better Business Bureau and other government agencies and on an Internet consumer website about the marketing and sale of its real estate seminars.

In response, plaintiffs filed an Anti-SLAPP motion, asking the court to dismiss the defamation claim because the lawsuit was brought in retaliation for Ms. Makaeff exercising her right to free speech.  In August 2010, the district court denied Plaintiffs’ Anti-SLAPP motion, and plaintiffs appealed.

In the Ninth Circuit’s April 17, 2013 ruling, the Court noted that statements by consumers, such as Ms. Makaeff, relate to an “issue of public interest” and are protected activity under the Anti-SLAPP statute because they are “a warning not to use [the company’s] services.”  The Court also found that Trump University was a limited purpose public figure because a “public controversy existed over Trump University’s educational and business practices when Makaeff made her statements about them.”  The court held that “large scale, aggressive advertising can inject a person or entity into a public controversy that arises from the subject of that advertising,” and that “Trump University conducted an aggressive advertising campaign in which it made controversial claims about its products and services,” and that there was a “direct relationship between Trump University’s promotional messages and Makaeff’s allegedly defamatory statements.”  The Ninth Circuit stated that: “[H]aving traded heavily on the name and fame of its founder and chairman, Trump University was in no position to complain if the public’s interest in Trump fueled the flames of the legitimate controversy that its business practices engendered.”

In regard to Trump University’s contention that Makaeff previously said positive things about Trump University, the court eloquently stated: “As the recent Ponzi-scheme scandals involving onetime financial luminaries like Bernard Madoff and Allen Stanford demonstrate, victims of con artists often sing the praises of their victimizers until the moment they realize they have been fleeced.  Makaeff’s initial enthusiasm for Trump University’s program is not probative of whether she acted with actual malice.”

On November 27, 2013, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied Trump University’s petition for rehearing in a lengthy order drafted by Judge Wardlaw and Callahan (joined by Judges Fletcher and Gould); there is also a lengthy dissent by Judge Watford (joined by Judges Kozinski, Paez and Bea). In its opinion, the Court noted that: “Every circuit that has considered the issue has agreed with our conclusion in Newsham that anti-SLAPP statutes like California’s confer substantive rights under Erie.”  The Court concluded that Newsham and Batzel were correctly decided, that the purpose of an Anti-SLAPP motion is to “determine whether the defendant is being forced to defend against a meritless claim,” and that if Anti-SLAPP motions were not permitted in federal court, it would “put the federal courts at risk of being swept away in a rising tide of frivolous state [defamation] actions that would be filed in our circuit’s federal courts.”

The Ninth Circuit stated that: “Trump University’s counterclaim was obviously designed to overwhelm Makaeff by making it more burdensome and expensive for her to pursue her deceptive business practices claims against Trump University. Makaeff’s motion to strike concerned the frivolity of Trump University’s allegation that her speech about its deceptive business practices was defamatory; its very purpose was to determine whether Trump University’s counterclaim was designed to chill Makaeff’s valid exercise of her First Amendment rights.”

To schedule your free initial consultation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

New York Daily News Reports That Trump University Received D-Minus Rating From the BBB

The New York Daily News on Monday reported on the Trump University class-action lawsuit filed by Zeldes & Haeggquist LLP, as well as investigations by state attorneys general and complaints to the Better Business bureau involving Trump University.  According to the article by Doug Feiden, Trump University and Trump Institute have been deluged by complaints from more than 150 students in at least 22 states claiming they’ve been cheated out of tens of thousands of dollars.  These students include dozens of retirees, veterans, laid-off workers and seniors living on fixed incomes.

Trump University received a D-minus rating from the Better Business Bureau in January, which is under review after Trump University objected. Trump Institute got an F in early 2009.  After the New York Department of Education demanded Trump University stop calling itself a “university,” it changed its name to the “Trump Entrepreneur Initiative LLC” on Tuesday.

Zeldes & Haeggquist client and former New York teacher Patricia Murphy, who spent $15,000 on Trump seminars is quoted in the Daily News article stating:  ”I took out most of my life’s savings … maxed out my credit cards and badly damaged my credit rating.  What do I have to show for it? Big bills, interest payments, finance charges – an awful lot of stress.”

According to the investigation by the New York Daily News, attorneys general in six states and several Business Bureaus have received numerous complaints, and some are initiating investigations:

– In January, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott launched a probe of Trump University’s “possibly deceptive” advertising and business practices after getting two dozen complaints.

– Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum’s office is “reviewing” 20 complaints from people who paid up to $35,000 for various “Trump Elite” packages promising “priceless information” that never came.

– Better Business Bureaus have tracked at least 70 allegations of deceptive practices from Brooklyn to Honolulu. Those include complaints by students that they were pressured to max out credit cards.

“The complaint alleges, and the facts will show that the purpose of each seminar is not to teach students about real estate investing, but to convince them to buy additional Trump seminars,” said Amber Eck, a partner in the San Diego-based law firm Zeldes & Haeggquist LLP.

Here is a link to the New York Daily News article – http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2010/05/31/2010-05-31_trump_u_flunks_students_complaints_pile_up_from_those_who_paid_up_to_30g_say_the.html

To schedule your free initial consultation, contact us online or call (619) 342-8000 today!

Translate »