Just Verdicts
In the second episode about Rick Friedman's “Becoming a Trial Lawyer: A Guide for the Lifelong Advocate,” host Brendan Lupetin [https://www.pamedmal.com/our-team/brendan-lupetin/] takes a deep dive into Chapter 10. Titled “Forget Playing it Safe,” the chapter argues that there is no safe way to try a case — and there never was. Brendan shares two of his own trial stories: one where going all in on a single theory drew his client's fury before producing a strong verdict and another where the same bold approach backfired and ended in a loss. He closes by reviewing Friedman’s six-step framework for making tactical decisions grounded in your client's best interests, not your own fear of criticism. LEARN MORE AND CONNECT ☑️ Brendan Lupetin [https://www.pamedmal.com/our-team/brendan-lupetin/] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/brendan-lupetin-64903a7/] ☑️ Lupetin & Unatin, LLC [https://www.pamedmal.com/] ☑️ Connect: Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/LupetinUnatin] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/company/lupetin-and-unatin/] | YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@lupetin_unatin/videos] ☑️ Subscribe: Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/trial-medical-error/id1696181757] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/6IyvKFioZCilBS1NwdO0Y5] | YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLask1nFQd0NyxK7B0gLxeReBapxnYvnhj] EPISODE PREVIEW * Chapter 10 of Rick Friedman's “Becoming a Trial Lawyer” opens with a blunt declaration: There is no safe way to try a case, and tactical decisions will seldom feel safe. * In a case with two viable theories, Brendan went all in on the stronger one after focus groups backed his instinct; his client berated him after opening statement, and he spent the entire trial second-guessing himself before the verdict proved him right. * In a second case, Brendan made the bold call to go all in on "trying the lie" — a doctor whom he believed had written a CYA letter and hidden it in a drawer. It backfired, and he lost. But Brendan leans on Friedman’s philosophy that “in all tactical decisions, you give up something to gain something new.” * Friedman's framework for tactical decision-making includes thinking through the problem thoroughly on your own, brainstorming with partners, focus grouping the issues, and continuing to weigh the pros and cons as the case evolves. * The framework closes on two non-negotiables: Base every decision on your client's best interests and accept that you may look foolish for the choice you made — because if you're not willing to risk that, you have no business being a trial lawyer. Ready to refer or collaborate on med mal, medical negligence, and catastrophic injury cases? Visit our attorney referral page at PAMedMal.com/Refer. We handle cases in Pennsylvania and across the United States. PRODUCED AND POWERED BY LAWPODS [https://lawpods.com/]
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