Those who believe Lawrence Hughes needs to sue the Watchtower's attorneys will support the lawsuit. Those who think he should not sue them will not. He is correct that the two Watchtower attorneys were not biased but gave her lop-sided anti-emergency whole blood transfusions information. Therefore they broke the law of Canada which says that for informed consent a person must receive unbiased information.
For example they live in the physical confines of the Brooklyn-located complex of buildings of the Watchtower Society which tells JWs they must "repent" if they take blood transfusions or be under duress of being declared no longer a JW which causes severe disruption of normal family relationships.
Further, they receive room, board, food and health care from the Watchtower Society to say nothing of other perks.
Hence there was bias and as said they therefore broke the law of Canada.
Furthermore, they abetted the doctor who prescribed ARSENIC (a known poison) for Mr. Hughes' daughter, Bethany, who otherwise, according to the written sworn documentation from medical experts, would have stood a 30%-50% chance of continuing to live had she continued to received the normal standard of care which is emergency transfusion of whole blood.
In as much as blood supplies are now so guarded from infectious diseases including those of immunological effect that they are acknowledged by experts as safe, any advice that either the two Watchtower doctors or the aforesaid doctor gave, was biased toward an unnatural dangerous course of alternative treatment.
Bethany Hughes died believing misinformation, disinformation or an outright lie from the lips of these three persons who now facing the consequences, while trying to laugh it off or paint it as weak while also impugning the character of Mr. Hughes, which may pave the way toward additional litigation for redress.
Rather than see these vain ineffectual attacks continuing by proxy or otherwise, I would therefore recommend to those attorneys that they petition their controlling superiors on the Governing Body of the Watchtower Society over Jehovah's Witnesses in Brooklyn to immediately make a meaningful settlement offer to Mr. Hughes.
He may or may not turn it down (I cannot and do not speak for him but can make logical surmisals), but, then, it is possible that in view of the mounting court costs, his acceptance would be an agreeable arrangement to both his benefit, that of the Watchtower attorneys and doctor.
Now, it's your move.