Law firms objecting to their share of an estimated $550 million in attorney fees in the trans-vaginal mesh litigation have raised new accusations that lawyers tasked with allocating those funds resorted to self-dealing and bill-padding to line their own pockets.

The recent filings are the latest skirmish over fees in the multidistrict litigation over mesh devices—specifically, how much each of the 94 plaintiffs law firms that did work for the “common benefit” should get. On March 12, the fee and compensation committee and Daniel Stack—a retired judge on the Madison County Circuit Court in Illinois appointed to review the fee allocation process—issued their final recommendations on how to allocate the fees.

But Adam Slater of Mazie Slater Katz & Freeman in Roseland raised questions in a March 26 objection about the allocation process, also challenging his firm's recommended share of roughly $6 million.

He wrote that plaintiffs attorney Bryan Aylstock pressured the chairman of the fee and compensation committee, Henry Garrard, to boost the amount of attorney fees to his Pensacola, Florida-based firm, Aylstock, Witkin, Kreis & Overholtz, which ultimately got $10 million more. According to the objection, Aylstock threatened that his colleague, D. Renée Baggett, a member of the fee and compensation committee, would not sign off on its preliminary written recommendation if Garrard refused to increase his firm's fees.

Mazie Slater partners Adam Slater and David Mazie filed separate declarations insisting that Stack had relayed the information at a Jan. 3 meeting with them.

“Judge Stack stated that he 'was sickened' and 'angered' by this conduct, which he described as Mr. Aylstock pressuring the FCC chairman when he was particularly vulnerable,” Slater wrote in his firm's objection. “Judge Stack explained that he could not recommend the far lower amount he believed Aylstock deserved since he was, as he termed it, 'put in a box' since the agreement with the Aylstock firm included assurance that Judge Stack would not reduce the agreed-upon award.”

The objection also accused Motley Rice of padding its bills in the mesh litigation.

“Similarly, Judge Stack stated that he believed that Motley Rice (like some others in the litigation) had inflated its contributions and had 'padded' its time with thousands of phantom hours,” Slater wrote. Stack told him that Motley Rice did that “in every litigation,” according to the objection.

Slater declined to comment.

Shanin Specter, of Kline & Specter, also filed a March 26 objection that raised similar concerns. Specter is challenging his Philadelphia firm's $3.7 million fee allocation, despite about $16.4 million in lodestar billing. “At bottom,” he wrote, “Mr. Stack's report is worthless.”

In an email, Specter wrote that both filings raised new concerns about the fee allocation process.

“Mazie Slater's and Kline & Specter's filings contain disturbing evidence of fraudulent billing and improper influence of and wrongful conduct by a court appointed officer,” he wrote. “This evidence casts a dark shadow on these proceedings.”

Both Aylstock and Baggett did not respond to a request for comment. Joseph Rice of Motley Rice in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina, another member of the fee and compensation committee, also did not respond.

Stack, in St. Louis, did not respond to a request for comment.

Garrard, of Blasingame, Burch, Garrard & Ashley in Athens, Georgia, denied the account. “I was not pressured by the Aylstock firm nor taken advantage of in any respect. We had discussions just as we did with many firms,” he said in an email.

The fee and compensation committee's response to the objections is due April 9.

On Jan. 30, U.S. District Judge Joseph Goodwin of the Southern District of West Virginia, who is overseeing seven multidistrict litigation proceedings that at one point surpassed 100,000 mesh lawsuits, granted a request from the fee and compensation committee that defendants hold back 5 percent of all settlements and judgments to pay common benefit counsel. Such a holdback, which Kline & Specter had opposed, would grant $366 million in common benefit fees based on the $7.25 billion in settlements so far. The final settlement price tag, though, could be closer to $11 billion, granting about $550 million in fees in the end.

In their objections this week, both Mazie Slater and Kline & Specter insisted that the fee and compensation committee short-changed them, particularly given their work on trials in New Jersey and Pennsylvania state courts. Both objected to the fee amounts granted to the eight law firms on the fee and compensation committee, which got an average award of more than $27 million.

Mazie Slater claimed to be the “catalyst of the overall litigation” and “one of the driving forces and largest risk-takers in the litigation,” filing the first case in the country against Johnson & Johnson's Ethicon Inc. in 2008. Yet Stack's report affirmed the committee's recommendation of $6.02 million. That's not “commensurate with its status as one of the few fundamental leaders of this litigation,” citing the “astronomic” fees that went to members of the fee and compensation committee, Slater wrote.

“Fair evaluation of Mazie Slater's contributions overwhelmingly supports a significantly greater award,” Slater wrote. “The inescapable conclusion is that the most important qualification for common benefit fees was a seat on the FCC, or a close affiliation with an FCC member.”

Kline & Specter, in its objection, cited six verdicts the firm obtained for plaintiffs totaling more than $146 million, all in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.

“Kline & Specter played a critical role in the transvaginal mesh litigation,” Specter wrote. “No firm tried more cases than Kline & Specter or won more verdicts.”

The firm raised questions about the methodologies used to calculate the fee allocations and whether Stack, whose official title is “external review specialist,” was too reliant on the fee and compensation committee to be a true neutral. On Feb. 14, Specter filed a motion to appoint a new special master, citing Stack's “inherent conflict” in having signed the preliminary written recommendation while negotiating with objectors—a move that Garrard called “frivolous” in a response. Specter also asked for more documents that could reveal what firms actually billed.

Goodwin rejected both motions.

“Mr. Stack's methodology, if one exists, was severely flawed,” Specter wrote in his firm's objection this week. “Mr. Stack simply rubberstamped the FCC's recommendations and stated that neither he nor the FCC were required to provide an explanation. This is fundamentally unfair.”

Another firm, Anderson Law Offices in Cleveland, raised similar concerns about Stack in a March 27 objection.

In court papers, Stack defended his actions and the transparency of the fee allocation process. In his recommendation this month, Stack noted that of the 94 firms seeking fees, eight had objected to the fee and compensation committee's final recommendation and, after negotiating with them, only four, including Kline & Specter and Mazie Slater, remained.