In Dante’s “Inferno,” the underworld has many levels.
The case of the near-fatal torching of Lonnie Paige, inside a fiery furnace in the basement of Bridgeport’s St. Andrew’s Church, has its own intricate layers of hellishness.
The case of the near-fatal torching of Lonnie Paige inside a fiery furnace in a church basement has its own intricate layers of hellishness. The horribly injured plaintiff's Conn. lawyer Vincent M. Musto doesn't mention the anguish of winning a $3.2 million jury verdict at trial up through a close Supreme Court test. In a rehearing, the victory turned into defeat. Musto speaks of his client: "The Supreme Court sustained his verdict, he's ecstatic, and now they change their mind. Two severe tragedies."
August 10, 1999 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
In Dante’s “Inferno,” the underworld has many levels.
The case of the near-fatal torching of Lonnie Paige, inside a fiery furnace in the basement of Bridgeport’s St. Andrew’s Church, has its own intricate layers of hellishness.
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