Robert Cattanach is used to mixing with the big boys. Cattanach is a partner at the prestigious Dorsey & Whitney law firm and a nationally recognized expert on cyber security. He is a former counsel to the Secretary of the Navy, and he represented the FBI and CIA as a Justice Department attorney. He is also chairman of the board of the Ordway Theater.
So Cattanach didn't hesitate to sue BNSF, one of the nation's largest railroad companies, over a bike accident — his own — after the company refused to pay a few thousand dollars in medical bills. For a while Cattanach even represented himself.
"I don't wear down easily," says Cattanach, who is 64 and lives in St. Paul. "I don't give up."
Cattanach won a round last week when U.S. District Judge John Tunheim concluded that Cattanach appears to have a case and rejected a motion by BNSF to dismiss his lawsuit seeking more than $350,000 in damages.
Cattanach is not your typical recreational cyclist. He was the Minnesota state bicycling champion in both the Criterium race and Road Race in the 50 and over master class in 2009.
On July 15, 2012, he was on a Sunday morning bike ride with his wife and a small group of friends when his front wheel plunged into a 2-inch-wide gap that stretched between two rails of a track at a railroad crossing at Broadway Avenue in St. Paul Park. He estimates he was going 10 miles per hour.
Cattanach, who was wearing a helmet, was thrown over the handlebars and landed hard on the street, hitting his head, breaking his collarbone, injuring a vertebra in his neck and dislocating his left thumb.
"I will never forget the terrific and abrupt sound of metal against concrete and the thud of someone hitting the pavement," said Allyson Hartle, his wife, who was riding ahead of him. "I turned around and felt sick, and there he was lying down, his hand was bloody … He could barely talk."