“For the first time in its history, the American College of Radiology has expelled a member for giving inaccurate expert testimony. Dr. E. James Tourje, a neuroradiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, was expelled [last month] for violating the ACR code of ethics, which states that expert testimony should be nonpartisan, scientifically correct, and clinically accurate.” Dr. Tourje had testified on behalf of the plaintiff in two malpractice cases, both of which resulted in defense verdicts. (“‘Expert’ witness gets booted from ACR”, Diagnostic Imaging Online, Jul. 8; Arati Murti, “Stat Read: Election-Year Politics Push Medical Liability Skirmishes to Trenches”, Imaging Economics, Aug.).
In a case several years ago, Judge Richard Posner of the Seventh Circuit gave impetus to the then-nascent trend toward professional self-regulation of expert testimony, writing in an opinion that “this kind of professional self-regulation furthers rather than impedes the cause of justice. More policing of expert testimony is required, not less.” (Russell M. Pelton, “Professing Professional Conduct: AANS Raises the Bar for Expert Testimony”, AANS Bulletin, Spring 2002. In the latest ABA Journal, Terry Carter discusses the controversy and in particular the formation of the Coalition and Center for Ethical Medical Testimony to promote efforts by associations to act against what Peter Huber has called malpractice by mouth. (“M.D. With a Mission”, ABA Journal, Aug., reprinted at CCEMT site)(PDF). The organized plaintiff’s bar is completely apoplectic about the trend: for its views, see Stephanie Mencimer, “The White Wall”, Legal Affairs, Mar-Apr.; Steve Ellman, “Code of Silence”, Miami Daily Business Review, Jun. 25, 2003.
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