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CASES OF NOTE:
McKinnie v. Barnhart,
368 F.3d 907 (7th Cir. 2004). In this case, the
7th Circuit found that Social Security failed to make an
inquiry into the reliability of the vocational expert's
conclusions, improperly insisting that the claimant pay
to substantiate expert testimony relied upon by the
Commissioner. This case is particularly helpful in
showing what needs to be done in order to challenge VE
testimony. Frederick J. Daley represented Mr.
McKinnie on behalf of the firm.
Diaz v. Prudential, No. 04-2342 (7th Cir. September
20, 2005).
The Seventh Circuit remanded
this case to the District Court for de novo
review. The Court held that plans without
discretion require a de novo review while plans
with discretion require a discretionary review. The
Court reasoned that the critical question was whether
the plan gave the employee adequate notice that the plan
administrator would make a judgment within the confines
of pre-set standards, or if it has the latitude to shape
the application, interpretation, and content of the
rules in each case. Mr. Diaz
was represented by Mark DeBofsky.
Young v. Barnhart, No. 03-1545 (7th Cir.
April 02, 2004). The court found the ALJ's residual
functional capacity assessment was flawed, as it failed
to account for the evidence regarding disabaility
claimant's problems accepting instruction, responding
appropriately to criticism from supervisors, thinking
independently, and setting realistic goals. Fred
Daley represented Mr. Young on behalf of the firm,
assisted by Steve Jackson and Suzanne Blaz.
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