Shownotes
After years of settling cases out of court, Mike Morse represented the parents of a college student who died at a friend’s house when he took a high dose of “molly,” or MDMA, that he was told was Adderall. The young man’s friends videotaped him and posted videos to Snapchat of him struggling under the effects of the drug, but they didn’t call for help until after he died.
Tearing up when the student’s parents told him the story, Mike agreed to take the case. But he hadn’t tried a case before a jury in 15 years, so he hired a jury consultant and coach and began listening to recordings, through Trial Lawyers University, of attorneys explaining how they won their cases.
Listen as Mike describes how he picked a jury, tried the case, and secured $75 million. He also reflects on a different case in which he secured the release of his client who had been wrongfully convicted.
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Episode Snapshot
- Why background mattered in Mike’s case representing the parents of a 21-year-old man who died after ingesting “molly” – which his friends said was Adderall.
- How charges were dismissed during the criminal trial because of prosecutorial misconduct.
- Why Mike hired a jury consultant who also coached him on how to present his case.
- Why Mike told prospective jurors that the case was about poisoning, not a drug overdose.
- Why Mike decided to show jurors the video of the victim after he took the drug.
- How jurors returned a $75 million verdict.
- Why Mike ranks his greatest success as a pro bono case where his wrongfully convicted client was set free.
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