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Webinar: How You Can Prevent a
Nuclear Verdict

Your playbook for staying off the deposition chair.

Two Dates to Register:

Wednesday, March 24, 2021 | 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Thursday, March 25, 2021 | 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST

 

About The Event

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According to a 2020 ATRI study*, Nuclear Verdicts (awards of over $1M to plaintiffs) between the years 2005 and 2011 totaled 79.

That number has dramatically increased to to 265 between 2012 and 2019.

Plaintiff attorneys are getting better each day at repeating a formula that successfully paints the motor carrier as a big bad corporation with no regard for human safety. Learn their “reptilian theory” and how to successfully defend against it.

We’ve assembled a team of experts to be your guides who will provide you with a playbook to execute so you can stay off the news as the next victim.

*ATRI Research conducted was out of a sample of 600 "Nuclear Verdict" cases 

Register For March 24

Canada Flag-1Wednesday, March 24, 2021
12:00pm - 1:00pm ET
FREE to attend!

Register For March 25

Canva Design DAEVe5U2GPs-1Wednesday, March 25, 2021
12:00pm - 1:00pm ET
FREE to attend!

Topics Covered

Defining a Nuclear Verdict

  • How have they increased over the years?

Reptilian Theory

  • What is the reptile theory?
  • How is it being used by plaintiff’s personal injury lawyers against transportation companies?

Best Practices for the Deposition Chair

  • What are your recommended best practices when you’re in the deposition chair?

Claims Management:

  • What are the 2 or 3 things that you would recommend to fleets as tactics to reduce odds of involvement from Plaintiff Attorneys?
  • How do we stop the nonsense claims where a car (or truck) is barely scratched and there is an injury claim?
  • What can motor carriers do at a minimum to help themselves in this fight?

Policies and Procedures

  • Hiring: 
    • What are best practices?
    • How do you evaluate if you have best practices?
    • How can you ensure that they’re implemented and followed every time?
  • Safety documentation:
    • What does a good safety culture look like?
    • What are best practices?
    • How do you evaluate if you have best practices?
    • How can you ensure that they’re implemented and followed every time?
    • Compliance and Safety are different things. What’s the difference and why is that important for relating to nuclear verdicts?