At Hopkins the offer was $50 million. The settlement was $190 million. 4,500 people called because they recognized themselves in the story I told. That is what the right story does.
4,500 calls. $140 million difference. One story.
People had been harmed. Most did not know they were victims. The story I built answered three questions in order: what happened, why it affected their lives, and what they could do right now. They recognized themselves in it. They called.
Not because they do not care. Because nothing connects to their daily life. The story that runs at the top of the hour washes over them. The story that explains what happened to their water, their doctor, their child’s formula — that story stops them.
The story that breaks through is not the loudest story. It is the most personal one.
Question One
One sentence. No legal language. The fact, stated plainly so a parent driving to work understands it before the light changes.
Plaintiffs allege defendant knowingly marketed opioid analgesics while misrepresenting their addictive properties.
A pharmaceutical company knew their drug was addictive. They marketed it anyway. For twenty years.
Question Two
The daily-life connection. Not what happened in a courtroom. What happened on someone’s street. To someone they know. Maybe to them.
You may be entitled to compensation if you or a family member suffered harm during the relevant period.
Someone you know was affected. Maybe you. The company knew in 1996. They kept going until 500,000 people were dead.
The Sackler family extracted $10 billion from Purdue Pharma while 500,000 Americans died — and put their name on museum wings in New York and London. That is what you are fighting for when you file.
Question Three
One step. Not a form. Not a menu. A text. Right now. While the story is still running. Because by the time they find another lawyer the case is already gone.
Visit our website to complete an intake questionnaire and a team member will contact you within 3 to 5 business days.
Text this number right now. Someone responds in under 90 seconds.
A pharmaceutical company knew their drug was addictive. They marketed it anyway. For twenty years.
500,000 Americans are dead. The family extracted $10 billion and put their name on museum wings. Text this number. Someone responds in under 90 seconds.
A formula company knew their product caused a fatal bowel disease in premature infants. They marketed it to NICUs anyway.
If your premature baby was fed that formula in a NICU, your child may have been at risk. The CEO earned $22 million the year the lawsuits started. Text this number.
A fertilizer company released 215 million gallons of radioactive wastewater into Florida’s drinking water. They waited 19 days to tell anyone.
If you live near Mulberry, Florida, you gave your children that water for 19 days while the company said nothing. Text this number.
A platform’s own research showed it was damaging teenage girls’ mental health. They knew in 2019. They did not change it.
If your teenager has struggled with anxiety, depression, or eating disorders, the company had internal documents and said nothing. Text this number.
An institution moved a perpetrator from one community to another instead of stopping him. They knew. They said nothing. For years.
If you or someone you know was harmed by a person an institution protected, you are not alone. The institution made a choice — and that choice has a legal consequence. Text this number.
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