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| COMPENSATING VICTIMS | |
February 6, 2002 |
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Margaret Warner reports on the September 11th fund. Follow-up discussion |
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In late November, Attorney General John Ashcroft named Washington lawyer Kenneth Feinberg special master to administer the program. The law gives Feinberg, who is serving without pay, wide latitude to determine the size of individual awards. On December 20, Feinberg issued preliminary rules on how the money would be paid out. |
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| Preliminary rules and regulations | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: Feinberg said each victim's family would get the same amount for pain and suffering, $250,000, with another $50,000 for each dependent spouse and child. But the payment for economic loss would be different for each family, depending on the victim's age, income, future earning power, and number of dependents. Feinberg said the average award would be about $1.6 million before deducting other benefits. And he urged families to participate instead of going to court.
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| Victims' families respond | ||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: Feinberg invited public comment on his proposed rules, and he's gotten an earful at town hall-style meetings like this one in Staten Island last Monday.
WOMAN: So how can you not use all your discretion in order to allow these family members the most that they can get, especially under pain and suffering, when you know that on September 12 the Congress, in fact, took away everybody in this room's right to be able to get more than $250,000. MARGARET WARNER: Laurie Laychak, whose husband, David, died in the Pentagon attack, says the formula, after all the deductions, will leave her with nothing.
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