Inside the Ruthless Calculus: Why Big Companies Risk Your Safety for Profit—and How You Can Turn the Tables
Lawyers miss high-value defect cases every year. Not because they aren’t trying, but because they don’t know what to look for. That’s what I set out to change.
That was the motivation behind writing Defect Safety: A Primer for Lawyers to Identify Defective Products and Promote Consumer Safety Through Litigation. The book draws on lessons from nearly four decades in the courtroom, where I have seen how the justice system protects consumers when regulatory systems fall short.
The Florida Bar recently approved the book for continuing legal education credit, making it eligible for 14.0 hours of CLE under the self-study category. This matters not only because it fulfills a requirement, but because it signals a shift in what legal education can look like. Rather than abstract theory or checklist compliance, the approval affirms the value of practical insight drawn from real-world litigation.
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