11/24/2025
💥 $10 Million Jury Verdict — Justice for Our Client
Last week, our team secured a $10,000,000 jury verdict for our client — a 47-year-old full-time student pursuing her doctorate whose life was permanently changed when a Frito-Lay driver caused a violent collision, resulting in a severe talus fracture and rapidly progressing post-traumatic arthritis.
Her medical bills were low.
Her lifelong losses were not.
And the jury delivered full justice.
Brandon Yosha led the charge from day one.
His voir dire centered the importance of non-economic damages, ensuring jurors understood what real justice required. His opening statement made clear exactly what had been taken from Karen: decades of mobility, independence, and quality of life. In closing, Brandon’s visual timeline — paired with the powerful “man in the dark suit with the briefcase” analogy — showed why a significant verdict wasn’t just reasonable, but necessary.
Bryan Tisch brought the emotional heart of the case.
His meticulous preparation of Karen — and the direct examination he delivered — allowed the jury to truly see her: her purpose, her dreams, and the magnitude of what this injury stole from her. Byran also handled the live direct examination of our independent medical examiner and did a tremendous job explaining the permanency of the injury through this doctor's testimony.
Alex Trueblood delivered a standout performance.
His cross-examination dismantled the defense vocational expert, and he elevated the credibility of our economist Sara Ford, whose clear, data-driven testimony gave the jury a solid foundation for assessing loss.
A huge thank-you to Jessica Brylo of Trial Dynamics, whose insight was invaluable. She traveled to Indianapolis to assist with jury selection, and her intuition, strategic guidance, and witness preparation — especially with Karen — were extraordinary.
💥 Offer at Mediation: $5,000
💥 Final Offer: $200,000
💥 Jury Verdict: $10,000,000
When we have a righteous case and a deserving client, we take the road less traveled — and let the jury decide.