An Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer helps families pursue compensation when a loved one dies due to someone else’s negligence or wrongful act involving 7-hydroxymitragynine, a potent compound found in kratom products that has been linked to overdoses and fatalities.
The proliferation of kratom products containing 7-OH has created a public health crisis that many families were unprepared for. What seemed like a legal, natural supplement available at gas stations and smoke shops has resulted in tragic deaths across Indianapolis and throughout Indiana. These products often contain concentrated amounts of 7-hydroxymitragynine far exceeding what occurs naturally in kratom leaves, and manufacturers frequently fail to provide adequate warnings about the risks of respiratory depression, overdose, and death. When a loved one dies after using these products, families are left not only with profound grief but also with questions about who should be held accountable and how they can seek justice while facing mounting funeral expenses and financial hardship.
If you’ve lost a family member to 7-OH kratom products in Indianapolis, Life Justice Law Group understands the devastating impact this tragedy has had on your life. Our experienced Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyers are committed to investigating these cases thoroughly and holding negligent manufacturers, distributors, and retailers accountable for placing dangerous products in the hands of consumers without proper warnings. We offer free consultations and case evaluations on a contingency basis, which means your family pays no fees unless we win your case. Call (480) 378-8088 today to discuss your legal options and learn how we can help your family pursue the compensation and justice you deserve.
Understanding 7-OH and Its Dangers
7-hydroxymitragynine, commonly abbreviated as 7-OH, is an alkaloid compound that occurs naturally in kratom leaves but in very small concentrations. The compound acts on opioid receptors in the brain, producing effects similar to prescription opioids and heroin but with significantly greater potency than the primary kratom alkaloid mitragynine. Recent studies have shown that 7-OH binds more strongly to mu-opioid receptors than morphine, making it particularly dangerous when concentrated in synthetic or enhanced kratom products.
The kratom market has evolved dramatically over the past several years, with manufacturers increasingly extracting and concentrating 7-hydroxymitragynine to create more potent products that produce stronger euphoric effects. These enhanced products may contain 7-OH levels dozens or even hundreds of times higher than what naturally occurs in traditional kratom leaf powder. The concentrated nature of these products dramatically increases the risk of respiratory depression, overdose, and death, particularly when users are unaware of the actual potency of what they are consuming or when products are mislabeled regarding their 7-OH content.
The Legal Landscape of 7-OH Kratom in Indiana
Indiana currently does not ban kratom or 7-hydroxymitragynine at the state level, meaning these products remain legally available for sale throughout Indianapolis and surrounding counties. However, the absence of a statewide ban does not mean these products are safe or that manufacturers and sellers have no legal obligations to consumers. Federal and state consumer protection laws, product liability statutes, and wrongful death provisions all apply to kratom products regardless of their legal status for sale.
The legal status creates a complicated situation where families who have lost loved ones to 7-OH products must pursue compensation through wrongful death and product liability claims rather than relying on criminal prosecution of sellers. Under Indiana Code § 34-23-1-1, the personal representative of a decedent’s estate may bring a wrongful death action when the death was caused by the wrongful act or omission of another person or entity. This statute provides the foundation for holding manufacturers, distributors, and retailers accountable when their negligent actions or failure to warn consumers about dangers leads to a fatal overdose. The two-year statute of limitations under Indiana Code § 34-11-2-4 requires families to act relatively quickly to preserve their legal rights.
Who Can File a 7-OH Wrongful Death Claim in Indianapolis
Indiana wrongful death law designates specific individuals who have the legal standing to file a wrongful death claim when a family member dies due to another party’s negligence. Understanding who can file and the priority order established by statute is essential for families seeking justice after a 7-OH-related death.
Under Indiana Code § 34-23-1-1, the personal representative of the deceased person’s estate must file the wrongful death action. This personal representative is typically named in the decedent’s will or appointed by the probate court if no will exists. The personal representative acts on behalf of the estate and the surviving family members who are entitled to receive compensation from any settlement or verdict. Indiana Code § 34-23-1-2 establishes that damages recovered go to the decedent’s dependent next of kin, with surviving spouses and children having priority, followed by parents if no spouse or children survive, and then other dependent relatives in the absence of closer family members.
This legal structure means that even if you are the surviving parent or spouse, you typically cannot file the lawsuit in your own name but must work through the personal representative of the estate. Your Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer will help you navigate the probate process if no personal representative has been appointed yet and ensure that the proper party files the lawsuit within the required timeframe. The law’s focus on dependent family members recognizes that wrongful death compensation should go to those who suffered financial dependency on the deceased and who have been most directly harmed by the loss.
Types of Compensation Available in 7-OH Wrongful Death Cases
Wrongful death claims arising from 7-OH kratom products can recover several categories of damages designed to compensate the family for both economic losses and the profound personal loss of their loved one. Understanding these damage categories helps families appreciate the full scope of compensation they may pursue.
Medical and Funeral Expenses
Families can recover all reasonable medical expenses incurred in attempting to save their loved one’s life, including emergency room care, ambulance transport, hospital stays, intensive care treatment, and any other medical intervention attempted before death occurred. These bills often total tens of thousands of dollars even when treatment was brief, placing significant financial strain on grieving families who are simultaneously dealing with lost income and funeral costs.
Funeral and burial expenses are also recoverable, including costs for the funeral service, casket or cremation, burial plot, headstone, and related memorial expenses. Indiana law recognizes that families should not bear the financial burden of laying their loved one to rest when that death was caused by another party’s negligence. Your attorney will compile documentation of all these expenses to present a complete accounting of the economic damages your family has suffered.
Loss of Financial Support
When the deceased person provided financial support to their family, the wrongful death claim can recover compensation for the loss of that support extending into the future. This includes lost wages and employment benefits the deceased would have earned during their expected working life, calculated based on their earning capacity, work history, education, and career trajectory at the time of death.
The calculation of lost financial support considers the deceased person’s life expectancy, retirement age, likely salary increases over time, and the portion of their income that would have been contributed to the support of dependent family members. Economic experts often provide testimony about these projections to ensure the family receives fair compensation for decades of lost financial security. This compensation is particularly critical when the deceased was the primary breadwinner for young children who will now grow up without that financial support.
Loss of Love and Companionship
Indiana wrongful death law recognizes that the death of a family member causes profound non-economic harm that deserves compensation even though it cannot be precisely calculated. Loss of love, companionship, care, and guidance represents the emotional and relational harm suffered by surviving spouses, children, and parents who must now live without their loved one.
For a surviving spouse, this includes the loss of marital companionship, emotional support, sexual relations, and the shared life partnership they expected to continue for decades. For children, it includes the loss of parental guidance, nurturing, mentorship, and presence during important life events like graduations, weddings, and the birth of grandchildren. For parents who lose adult children, it encompasses the loss of the unique parent-child bond and the expectation of their child outliving them. While no amount of money can truly compensate for these losses, Indiana law recognizes that substantial damages are appropriate to acknowledge the magnitude of what the family has lost.
Punitive Damages in Cases of Gross Negligence
In cases where the defendant’s conduct was particularly egregious, involving reckless disregard for consumer safety or intentional misconduct, Indiana law allows for punitive damages under Indiana Code § 34-51-3-2. These damages are designed not to compensate the family but to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct in the future.
Punitive damages may be appropriate in 7-OH wrongful death cases where manufacturers knew their products contained dangerous concentrations of 7-hydroxymitragynine but sold them anyway without adequate warnings, where testing revealed serious safety concerns that were ignored, or where companies marketed products as safe and natural while concealing known overdose risks. The availability of punitive damages depends on proving the defendant’s knowledge and conscious disregard of known dangers. Your attorney will investigate whether evidence supports this higher level of fault that justifies punitive damages in your case.
Common Liable Parties in 7-OH Wrongful Death Cases
Determining who should be held legally responsible for a 7-OH-related death requires careful investigation of the entire chain of distribution from manufacturer to consumer. Multiple parties may share liability depending on their role in creating, distributing, or selling the dangerous product.
Product Manufacturers – The companies that extract, concentrate, or synthesize 7-hydroxymitragynine and formulate it into capsules, liquids, or other consumable products bear primary responsibility when their products cause deaths. Manufacturers have a legal duty to ensure their products are reasonably safe for consumer use, to conduct adequate testing to identify dangers, and to provide clear warnings about known risks. When manufacturers create highly concentrated 7-OH products without proper safety testing or adequate labeling about potency and overdose risk, they can be held liable for resulting deaths under product liability law.
Distributors and Wholesalers – Companies that purchase kratom products from manufacturers and distribute them to retailers throughout Indianapolis and Indiana may share liability if they knew or should have known about the dangerous nature of the products they were distributing. Distributors who ignore warning signs about product safety, who fail to verify that products meet safety standards, or who continue distributing products after learning of overdoses and deaths may be held accountable for negligently placing dangerous products into the stream of commerce.
Retail Sellers – Gas stations, smoke shops, convenience stores, and other retailers that sell 7-OH kratom products to consumers have responsibilities to ensure the products they offer are safe and properly labeled. Retailers can face liability when they sell products with inadequate warnings, when they make false or misleading claims about safety, when they sell to visibly impaired individuals, or when they continue selling products after learning of associated deaths and overdoses. The local nature of retail liability means that Indianapolis stores where the fatal product was purchased can be named as defendants in wrongful death lawsuits.
Online Marketplaces – E-commerce platforms that allow third-party sellers to offer kratom products may have legal exposure depending on their level of involvement in the transaction and whether they exercise control over product listings, safety claims, and seller vetting. The extent of marketplace liability continues to evolve through litigation, but families whose loved ones purchased fatal 7-OH products online should not automatically assume that online platforms are immune from suit.
Product Liability Claims in 7-OH Death Cases
Wrongful death claims arising from 7-OH kratom products typically proceed under product liability legal theories that hold manufacturers and sellers accountable for placing defective or unreasonably dangerous products on the market. Understanding these legal theories helps families appreciate how liability is established even when the product’s active ingredients are not illegal.
Manufacturing Defects
A manufacturing defect exists when a product departs from its intended design and becomes more dangerous as a result of an error in the manufacturing process. In 7-OH kratom cases, manufacturing defects might include contamination with other dangerous substances, errors in concentration that result in far higher 7-OH levels than intended, or variability between batches that makes dosing unpredictable and dangerous.
Proving a manufacturing defect requires showing that the product that caused death differed from other products in the same line and that this deviation made it unreasonably dangerous. Testing of the product consumed by the deceased person, comparison with other samples from the same batch, and analysis of the manufacturer’s quality control records all contribute to proving manufacturing defect claims.
Design Defects
A design defect exists when the product is manufactured as intended but the design itself is unreasonably dangerous even when the product is used as directed. For 7-OH kratom products, design defect claims focus on the decision to create products with dangerously high concentrations of 7-hydroxymitragynine when safer alternatives exist.
Families pursuing design defect claims must typically prove that a reasonable alternative design would have reduced the risk of death without substantially impairing the product’s utility. This might include products with lower 7-OH concentrations, products that combine 7-OH with antagonists that reduce overdose risk, or standardized products with consistent dosing that allows users to avoid accidental overdoses. Expert testimony about product design, pharmacology, and industry standards plays a crucial role in proving design defect claims.
Failure to Warn
Failure to warn claims focus on the adequacy of information provided to consumers about product dangers. Even if a product is properly manufactured and reasonably designed, manufacturers and sellers have a duty to warn consumers about risks that are known or should be known through reasonable testing and research.
For 7-OH kratom products, failure to warn claims address missing or inadequate warnings about overdose risk, respiratory depression, potential interactions with other substances, the dangers of concentrated 7-OH compared to traditional kratom, and the absence of safety studies establishing safe dosing. When manufacturers market products as natural dietary supplements without explaining that they contain synthetic concentrations of an opioid-like compound, they create a dangerous mismatch between consumer expectations and actual product risks. Adequate warnings must be specific, prominent, and clear enough that ordinary consumers understand the serious dangers involved.
The Investigation Process After a 7-OH Death
Building a successful wrongful death case requires thorough investigation to establish what product the deceased person consumed, how they obtained it, what its actual chemical composition was, and how it caused death. This investigation begins immediately after you retain an Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer.
Securing Physical Evidence
Your attorney will work quickly to secure any remaining product that the deceased person had in their possession at the time of death. These product samples are critical for laboratory testing to determine the actual concentration of 7-hydroxymitragynine and to identify any other dangerous substances or contaminants present. Product packaging, labels, and purchase receipts all provide important evidence about where the product was purchased and what claims or warnings were provided to consumers.
The investigation may also involve purchasing additional samples of the same product from the same seller to determine whether the product that caused death was representative of the product line or whether it was an outlier. This testing can reveal manufacturing inconsistencies, mislabeling issues, and discrepancies between what the product claims to contain and what it actually contains.
Obtaining Medical Records and Autopsy Reports
Your attorney will obtain complete medical records from any emergency treatment your loved one received before death, including ambulance records, emergency room notes, hospital records, and intensive care documentation. These records establish the medical response to the overdose, the symptoms observed, the treatments attempted, and the medical determination of cause of death.
The autopsy report and toxicology results are essential evidence in 7-OH wrongful death cases. The autopsy establishes the medical cause of death and documents physical findings consistent with opioid overdose. Toxicology testing identifies the presence and concentration of 7-hydroxymitragynine in the deceased person’s system at the time of death, along with any other substances present that might have contributed to or complicated the overdose. Your attorney may retain independent forensic pathologists to review the autopsy findings and provide expert opinions about how the 7-OH product caused death.
Investigating the Product’s History
A thorough investigation examines the history of the product that caused death, including whether similar products from the same manufacturer or seller have been linked to other overdoses, injuries, or deaths. Your attorney will search FDA warning letters, consumer complaints, news reports, social media posts, and prior litigation to determine whether the defendant knew or should have known about dangers associated with their products.
This investigation may reveal patterns of similar deaths across multiple states, FDA testing results showing dangerous concentrations of 7-OH in the product line, or internal company documents showing that safety concerns were raised but ignored. Evidence that the defendant was aware of dangers but continued selling products without adequate warnings strengthens the wrongful death claim and may support punitive damages.
Filing a Wrongful Death Lawsuit in Indianapolis
Once the investigation is complete and liability is established, your attorney will file a wrongful death lawsuit in the appropriate Indiana court. Understanding the filing process and what happens after the lawsuit is filed helps families know what to expect during litigation.
Choosing the Appropriate Court
Most wrongful death lawsuits in Indianapolis are filed in the Marion County Superior Court or the Marion County Circuit Court, depending on case complexity and other factors. If the defendant company is located outside Indiana or if federal jurisdiction applies for other reasons, the case might be filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, which is also located in Indianapolis.
Your attorney will evaluate which court provides the best forum for your case based on factors including the residency of parties, the location where the fatal product was purchased, applicable legal issues, and strategic considerations about jury pools and procedural rules. The choice of court can affect timelines, available procedures, and litigation strategies.
The Complaint and Initial Filings
The lawsuit begins with the filing of a complaint that names the defendants, describes the factual circumstances of your loved one’s death, explains the legal theories supporting liability, and specifies the damages your family is seeking. The complaint must be detailed enough to provide defendants with notice of the claims against them while preserving the ability to develop additional facts through discovery.
After filing, defendants must be formally served with the lawsuit, giving them official notice and an opportunity to respond. Defendants typically file an answer denying liability and may also file motions seeking to dismiss certain claims or narrow the case. Your attorney will respond to these motions, and the court will rule on preliminary legal issues before the case proceeds to discovery.
The Discovery Phase and Building Your Case
After initial pleadings and motions, the case enters the discovery phase where both sides exchange information, documents, and evidence. This phase typically lasts several months and involves multiple types of discovery procedures.
Document Production
Both sides will exchange relevant documents including the deceased person’s medical records, product purchase receipts, communications with manufacturers or sellers about the product, internal company documents about product development and safety testing, prior complaints about similar products, and financial records supporting damage claims. Your attorney will review thousands of pages of documents produced by defendants to find evidence supporting liability.
The document exchange often reveals critical evidence that was not available before the lawsuit was filed, including internal emails showing that companies knew about overdose risks, testing results that were not disclosed to consumers, and evidence of cost-cutting measures that compromised product safety. This documentary evidence forms the foundation of the liability case.
Depositions
Depositions involve in-person questioning of witnesses under oath with testimony recorded by a court reporter. Your attorney will depose company representatives responsible for product development, safety testing, labeling decisions, and marketing claims. These depositions lock witnesses into their version of events and often reveal inconsistencies or admissions that support the wrongful death claim.
You and other family members may also be deposed by defense attorneys who will ask about your loved one’s life, their use of the product, and the impact of their death on the family. Your attorney will prepare you thoroughly for your deposition and will be present to protect your interests and object to improper questions.
Expert Witness Preparation
Wrongful death cases involving 7-OH kratom products require testimony from multiple expert witnesses including forensic pathologists who can explain how the product caused death, pharmacologists who can testify about the dangers of concentrated 7-hydroxymitragynine, product safety experts who can identify failures in design and warnings, and economists who can calculate the value of lost financial support. Your attorney will retain qualified experts, provide them with case materials, and work with them to develop opinions that support your claims.
Defense experts will offer contrary opinions attempting to minimize the product’s role in causing death or to argue that the deceased person’s own actions caused the overdose. Your attorney’s experts must be prepared to refute these defense theories with scientifically sound opinions based on the evidence.
Settlement Negotiations and Trial Preparation
As discovery progresses and both sides develop a clearer picture of the strengths and weaknesses of the case, settlement negotiations often intensify. Understanding the settlement process and how it relates to trial preparation helps families make informed decisions about resolving their case.
Evaluating Settlement Offers
Defendants may make settlement offers at various points during litigation, sometimes early to avoid litigation costs and sometimes only after key evidence emerges through discovery. Your attorney will evaluate any settlement offer based on the strength of the liability evidence, the extent of damages your family has suffered, the likely outcome at trial, and the risks and costs of continued litigation.
Settlement negotiations involve back-and-forth communication between attorneys, sometimes facilitated by a mediator who helps both sides reach a mutually acceptable resolution. Your attorney will explain the pros and cons of any settlement offer, but the final decision about whether to accept a settlement or proceed to trial always rests with you as the client.
The Decision to Go to Trial
If settlement negotiations do not result in a fair offer that adequately compensates your family, your attorney will prepare the case for trial. Trial preparation involves finalizing expert testimony, preparing trial exhibits, developing voir dire questions for jury selection, crafting opening statements and closing arguments, and preparing witnesses to testify.
The decision to go to trial is significant because trials involve uncertainty, additional stress for the family, and public proceedings where painful details about your loved one’s death will be presented in open court. However, trial may be necessary when defendants refuse to acknowledge responsibility or make reasonable settlement offers. Your attorney will give you realistic assessments of trial risks and likely outcomes to help you make this important decision.
How Life Justice Law Group Handles 7-OH Wrongful Death Cases
When you choose Life Justice Law Group to represent your family in a 7-OH wrongful death case, you work with attorneys who understand both the legal complexity of product liability litigation and the profound emotional impact these cases have on grieving families. Our approach combines thorough investigation, aggressive advocacy, and compassionate client service.
We begin every case with a comprehensive investigation that goes beyond simply reviewing medical records and police reports. Our team works with forensic experts, toxicologists, and product testing laboratories to establish exactly what your loved one consumed and how it caused death. We obtain and test product samples, interview witnesses, and build a complete factual record before filing your lawsuit. This front-loaded investigation allows us to file a strong complaint that clearly establishes liability and puts defendants on the defensive from the outset.
Throughout the litigation process, we maintain regular communication with you about case developments, strategic decisions, and settlement discussions. We understand that you are grieving while simultaneously dealing with complex legal proceedings, and we work to make the legal process as understandable and manageable as possible. Our contingency fee arrangement ensures that you never pay attorney fees unless we recover compensation for your family, removing financial barriers that might otherwise prevent families from pursuing justice. Call (480) 378-8088 today to schedule a free consultation where we can discuss your case, answer your questions, and explain how we can help your family hold negligent companies accountable for your loved one’s death.
Frequently Asked Questions About 7-OH Wrongful Death Claims
How long do I have to file a wrongful death lawsuit after losing a loved one to a 7-OH product in Indianapolis?
Indiana Code § 34-11-2-4 establishes a two-year statute of limitations for wrongful death claims, meaning you generally have two years from the date of your loved one’s death to file a lawsuit. This deadline is strictly enforced, and failing to file within two years typically results in losing the right to pursue compensation entirely. However, the two-year period begins when the death occurs, not when you discover that a 7-OH product caused the death or when you learn about potential legal claims. Because these cases require extensive investigation before filing, consulting with an Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer as soon as possible after the death is critical to preserving your legal rights and ensuring adequate time for thorough case preparation.
Can we file a wrongful death claim even if the coroner’s report doesn’t specifically mention 7-OH or lists other contributing factors?
Yes, you can still pursue a wrongful death claim even if the death certificate or coroner’s report lists multiple causes of death or does not specifically identify 7-hydroxymitragynine by name. Wrongful death liability is based on whether the defendant’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing death, not whether it was the only factor. Many overdose deaths involve multiple substances, and toxicology reports may simply list “opioid toxicity” or “drug overdose” without specifying individual compounds. Your attorney will work with forensic pathologists and toxicologists to review the complete autopsy and toxicology results, interpret them in the context of the case, and establish the role that the 7-OH product played in causing death even when other factors were also present.
What if my family member purchased the 7-OH product online from an out-of-state company?
You can still pursue a wrongful death claim against out-of-state manufacturers and sellers who shipped products to Indianapolis that caused your loved one’s death. Indiana courts can exercise personal jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants when they purposefully direct their business activities toward Indiana residents, including by shipping products into the state, maintaining websites accessible to Indiana consumers, or advertising to Indiana residents. Your attorney will establish that the court has jurisdiction over the defendants and may file the lawsuit in federal court if diversity of citizenship jurisdiction applies. The fact that the product was purchased online rather than from a local retailer does not prevent you from pursuing claims against the manufacturer, the online retailer, or any other party in the chain of distribution.
What happens to the compensation recovered in a wrongful death lawsuit?
Compensation recovered in an Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawsuit goes to the estate of the deceased person and is then distributed to the surviving family members who were financially dependent on the deceased. Indiana Code § 34-23-1-2 establishes a priority order: surviving spouses and dependent children receive first priority, followed by parents if no spouse or dependent children survive, and then other dependent relatives if no closer family exists. The personal representative of the estate manages the wrongful death lawsuit and the distribution of any settlement or verdict. The court oversees the distribution to ensure it complies with Indiana law. Your attorney will explain how the damages will be distributed in your specific case based on your family structure and the nature of dependencies that existed.
Can we pursue a wrongful death claim if our loved one had a history of substance use issues?
Yes, a history of substance use does not prevent your family from pursuing a wrongful death claim for a 7-OH overdose. The law recognizes that manufacturers and sellers have responsibilities to all consumers, including vulnerable populations who may have substance use disorders. Defendants may attempt to argue that the deceased person’s own actions caused the overdose, but this defense has limitations. When a product is sold without adequate warnings about its dangerous potency, when labeling creates false impressions about safety, or when concentrated 7-OH products are marketed as natural supplements comparable to traditional kratom, the manufacturer’s and seller’s negligence remains actionable regardless of the user’s background. Your attorney will address any comparative fault arguments and work to ensure that defendants are held accountable for placing dangerous products on the market without proper safeguards.
How much does it cost to hire an Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer?
Life Justice Law Group handles wrongful death cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no upfront costs or attorney fees unless we successfully recover compensation for your family. Our fee is a percentage of the settlement or verdict we obtain, so we only get paid if you get paid. This arrangement aligns our interests with yours and ensures that grieving families can pursue justice without the financial burden of paying hourly legal fees during an already difficult time. During your free consultation, we will explain our fee structure clearly and answer any questions about costs and expenses associated with pursuing your case.
Contact a Indianapolis 7-OH Wrongful Death Lawyer Today
Losing a loved one to a 7-OH kratom overdose leaves families with unbearable grief and unanswered questions about how a legal product sold openly in stores could cause such a devastating outcome. While no legal action can bring your family member back, pursuing a wrongful death claim holds negligent companies accountable and provides financial compensation that acknowledges the magnitude of your loss and supports your family’s future stability. The path to justice begins with understanding your legal rights and taking action within the strict time limits Indiana law imposes on wrongful death claims.
Life Justice Law Group is committed to helping Indianapolis families affected by 7-OH kratom deaths pursue the compensation and accountability they deserve. Our experienced attorneys understand the complex product liability issues these cases present, and we have the resources and determination to take on manufacturers and retailers who prioritize profits over consumer safety. We offer free consultations and case evaluations with no obligation, and we work on a contingency fee basis so your family pays nothing unless we win. Call (480) 378-8088 today to speak with an Indianapolis 7-OH wrongful death lawyer who will listen to your story, answer your questions, and explain how we can help your family move forward during this difficult time.
