Families who lost a loved one to kratom overdose or poisoning may pursue a wrongful death claim against manufacturers, distributors, or retailers who sold unsafe or mislabeled products. In Nevada, wrongful death claims must be filed within two years of the death under NRS 11.190, and damages can include funeral costs, medical expenses, lost income, and the loss of companionship and support that the deceased would have provided.

The rising popularity of kratom has brought with it a troubling pattern of deaths linked to contamination, mislabeling, and misleading marketing. While kratom advocates claim the supplement offers pain relief and opioid withdrawal support, the reality is that many products contain dangerously high concentrations of mitragynine, adulterants, or contaminants that can cause respiratory depression, seizures, liver failure, and death. When families lose someone to kratom, they often discover the product was sold with no warnings about overdose risks, drug interactions, or the potential for addiction. These deaths are not accidents—they are preventable tragedies caused by companies that prioritize profit over safety.

If your family lost a loved one to kratom poisoning or overdose in Reno, Life Justice Law Group can help you pursue justice and accountability. We investigate kratom wrongful death cases thoroughly, working with toxicologists, medical experts, and product safety specialists to prove liability and secure maximum compensation. Our firm handles these claims on a contingency fee basis, which means your family pays no attorney fees unless we win your case. Call us today at (480) 378-8088 or complete our online form for a free consultation and case evaluation.

Understanding Kratom and Its Risks

Kratom is a plant-based supplement derived from the leaves of Mitragyna speciosa, a tree native to Southeast Asia. The leaves contain alkaloids—primarily mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine—that bind to opioid receptors in the brain, producing effects ranging from mild stimulation at low doses to sedation and pain relief at higher doses. Kratom is sold in powder, capsule, tablet, liquid extract, and tea form, often marketed as a natural remedy for chronic pain, anxiety, depression, and opioid withdrawal.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved kratom for any medical use and has issued multiple warnings about serious health risks including respiratory depression, seizures, liver damage, addiction, and death. Despite these warnings, kratom remains legal in Nevada and widely available in smoke shops, gas stations, online retailers, and specialty stores throughout Reno and Washoe County.

Why Kratom Is Dangerous

Kratom products sold in the United States are unregulated and inconsistent. Testing by the FDA and independent labs has found kratom products contaminated with heavy metals like lead and nickel, Salmonella bacteria, and synthetic opioids. Many products contain mitragynine levels far higher than the labels disclose, creating a risk of accidental overdose when users take what they believe is a safe dose.

The alkaloids in kratom interact with other central nervous system depressants including alcohol, benzodiazepines, prescription opioids, and gabapentin. These interactions can cause profound respiratory depression—a slowing of breathing that leads to oxygen deprivation, brain damage, and death. Between 2016 and 2021, the CDC identified kratom as a contributing factor in more than 800 overdose deaths nationwide, and toxicology reports frequently show kratom combined with other substances.

Common Kratom Products Linked to Deaths

Several kratom brands and product types have been associated with fatal overdoses or poisonings. Concentrated kratom extracts and enhanced formulations marketed as “ultra strong” or “premium grade” pose the highest risk because they contain mitragynine levels 10 to 20 times higher than traditional leaf powder. Liquid kratom shots sold in convenience stores often deliver extremely high doses in small volumes, making it easy for users to consume dangerous amounts.

Capsules and tablets may not list accurate alkaloid content, leading users to take multiple doses without realizing they have exceeded safe limits. Online retailers frequently sell kratom products with no quality control, no third-party testing, and no warnings about potential side effects or interactions.

Nevada Wrongful Death Law and Kratom Claims

Nevada wrongful death law allows the surviving spouse, children, or parents of a deceased person to file a claim when death results from the wrongful act or negligence of another party. Under NRS 41.085, a wrongful death claim seeks compensation for the losses suffered by the family, not the losses suffered by the deceased individual before death.

Kratom wrongful death cases typically involve product liability claims against manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers, and retailers who sold defective or dangerous products. Nevada recognizes three types of product liability claims: design defects, manufacturing defects, and failure to warn.

Who Can File a Kratom Wrongful Death Claim in Nevada

Nevada law under NRS 41.085 specifies that only certain individuals may bring a wrongful death claim. The surviving spouse has first priority. If there is no surviving spouse, the surviving children of the deceased may file. If there is no spouse or children, the deceased person’s parents may file.

The personal representative of the deceased person’s estate may also bring a wrongful death claim on behalf of the eligible survivors. All potential plaintiffs should be included in a single lawsuit to avoid multiple claims arising from the same death.

Statute of Limitations for Wrongful Death in Nevada

Under NRS 11.190, wrongful death claims in Nevada must be filed within two years from the date of death. This deadline is strictly enforced. If the claim is not filed within two years, the court will dismiss the case, and the family will lose the right to recover compensation.

Because kratom cases often require extensive investigation, toxicology analysis, and expert review, families should consult with an attorney as soon as possible. Gathering evidence, identifying all liable parties, and building a strong case takes time.

Types of Liability in Kratom Wrongful Death Cases

Kratom wrongful death claims can proceed under multiple legal theories depending on the facts of the case. Establishing liability requires proving that the defendant’s conduct or product caused the death and that the defendant owed a duty of care to the deceased.

Product liability claims are the most common approach in kratom cases because they hold manufacturers and sellers accountable for defective or dangerous products without requiring proof of negligence. Strict liability means the plaintiff only needs to prove the product was defective and caused harm—not that the defendant acted carelessly.

Design Defect Claims

A design defect exists when a product is inherently dangerous because of how it was designed, even if it was manufactured perfectly according to specifications. In kratom cases, design defect claims may argue that kratom products are unreasonably dangerous due to their high alkaloid content, their lack of standardized dosing, or their opioid-like effects that create addiction and overdose risk.

Plaintiffs must show that a safer alternative design was feasible and would have prevented the harm. For example, kratom products could be formulated with lower mitragynine concentrations, sold in child-resistant packaging, or restricted to regulated pharmacies rather than convenience stores.

Manufacturing Defect Claims

A manufacturing defect occurs when a product deviates from its intended design during production, making it more dangerous than other units of the same product. Kratom manufacturing defects include contamination with heavy metals, bacteria, or synthetic opioids, as well as mislabeling that understates alkaloid content or fails to disclose dangerous ingredients.

Independent lab testing frequently reveals that kratom products contain contaminants or alkaloid levels that do not match the label. If testing shows the specific product that caused death was contaminated or mislabeled, a manufacturing defect claim may succeed.

Failure to Warn Claims

Failure to warn claims, also known as marketing defect claims, arise when a manufacturer or seller does not provide adequate warnings or instructions about a product’s risks. Kratom products often lack warnings about overdose risk, respiratory depression, drug interactions, addiction potential, or the dangers of combining kratom with alcohol or prescription medications.

Under Nevada law, manufacturers have a duty to warn consumers about risks that are not obvious and that consumers cannot reasonably be expected to discover on their own. Kratom’s serious health risks—including death—are not common knowledge, and many users believe kratom is a safe, natural supplement. Failure to provide warnings about these risks can form the basis for liability.

Negligence Claims Against Retailers and Distributors

In some cases, wrongful death claims may also assert negligence against retailers, distributors, or online sellers. Negligence claims require proof that the defendant owed a duty of care, breached that duty, and caused harm as a result.

Retailers who sell kratom to minors, sell kratom knowing it is contaminated or mislabeled, or fail to comply with state or local labeling requirements may be liable under negligence theories. Distributors who fail to inspect or test products before distributing them may also face liability.

Damages Available in Nevada Kratom Wrongful Death Cases

Nevada wrongful death claims seek compensation for the economic and non-economic losses suffered by the surviving family members. Damages are intended to make the family financially whole and to account for the emotional harm caused by the loss of their loved one.

Unlike personal injury claims that compensate the injured person, wrongful death claims compensate the family for what they have lost. The specific damages available depend on the relationship between the survivors and the deceased, the deceased’s age and earning capacity, and the circumstances of the death.

Economic Damages

Economic damages compensate the family for measurable financial losses. These damages are calculated based on the deceased person’s income, earning potential, benefits, and the financial support they provided to the family.

Lost income includes the wages, salary, bonuses, and benefits the deceased would have earned over their expected working life. Experts calculate this by considering the deceased’s age, occupation, education, work history, and life expectancy. For younger victims with decades of earning potential ahead, lost income damages can reach into the millions of dollars.

Loss of Household Services

The deceased person’s contributions to the household in the form of childcare, home maintenance, cooking, cleaning, and other services have economic value. Nevada law allows families to recover the cost of replacing these services over the deceased person’s expected lifespan.

Experts calculate the value of household services by estimating what it would cost to hire professionals to perform the tasks the deceased provided. This category of damages is particularly significant when the deceased was a stay-at-home parent or caregiver.

Funeral and Burial Expenses

Families may recover the reasonable costs of funeral services, burial or cremation, memorial services, and related expenses. These damages are designed to relieve the family of the financial burden of laying their loved one to rest.

Nevada does not impose a cap on funeral expense damages, but they must be reasonable and directly related to the death. Receipts and invoices should be preserved to document these costs.

Non-Economic Damages

Non-economic damages compensate the family for losses that do not have a clear dollar value but are nonetheless profound and devastating. These damages recognize the emotional and relational harm caused by the death.

Loss of companionship, guidance, and support are central to non-economic damages. Nevada law allows surviving spouses, children, and parents to recover compensation for the loss of love, affection, comfort, society, and moral support they would have received from the deceased.

Pain and Suffering of Survivors

Survivors may recover damages for their own emotional suffering, grief, and mental anguish caused by the loss of their loved one. This includes the trauma of witnessing or learning about the death, the emotional devastation of losing a spouse or child, and the long-term psychological impact of the loss.

Children who lose a parent may experience developmental harm, anxiety, depression, and educational setbacks. Parents who lose a child often face profound grief that lasts a lifetime.

Punitive Damages

Nevada law allows punitive damages in wrongful death cases when the defendant’s conduct involved fraud, oppression, or malice. Under NRS 42.005, punitive damages are intended to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct in the future.

Kratom cases may warrant punitive damages if evidence shows the manufacturer or seller knew about serious health risks but concealed them from consumers, continued selling contaminated products after receiving complaints or adverse event reports, or engaged in fraudulent marketing. Punitive damages can significantly increase the total recovery and send a powerful message to the industry.

Proving a Kratom Wrongful Death Claim

Success in a kratom wrongful death case requires proving causation, liability, and damages through a combination of medical evidence, toxicology reports, product testing, and expert testimony. Building a strong case begins with a thorough investigation into the circumstances of the death and the kratom products involved.

Families should preserve all physical evidence including kratom products, packaging, receipts, and any communications with retailers or manufacturers. Medical records, autopsy reports, and toxicology results are critical to establishing the cause of death.

Obtaining and Analyzing Toxicology Reports

The medical examiner or coroner typically performs an autopsy and toxicology analysis to determine the cause and manner of death. Toxicology reports identify the substances present in the deceased person’s system at the time of death and their concentrations.

In kratom cases, toxicology reports may show the presence of mitragynine, 7-hydroxymitragynine, and other substances. If the report lists kratom as a contributing factor to the death or identifies dangerous levels of kratom alkaloids, it strengthens the wrongful death claim.

Product Testing and Analysis

Independent laboratory testing of the specific kratom product the deceased used is essential to proving liability. Testing can reveal whether the product was contaminated with heavy metals, bacteria, or synthetic opioids, whether it contained higher alkaloid levels than the label disclosed, or whether it deviated from the manufacturer’s specifications.

Testing results that show contamination or mislabeling support manufacturing defect and failure to warn claims. Your attorney will work with accredited laboratories to conduct comprehensive product analysis and preserve the results as evidence.

Expert Testimony

Kratom wrongful death cases rely heavily on expert testimony from toxicologists, pharmacologists, forensic pathologists, and product safety engineers. Experts explain how kratom affects the body, how the specific product caused or contributed to the death, and why the manufacturer’s conduct fell below industry standards.

Toxicologists can testify about the mechanism of kratom toxicity, the significance of the alkaloid levels found in the deceased’s system, and the role of drug interactions. Pharmacologists can explain kratom’s opioid-like effects and addiction potential. Product safety experts can identify defects in the product’s design, manufacturing, or labeling.

Establishing Causation

Causation is often the most contested issue in kratom wrongful death cases. Defendants frequently argue that other drugs, preexisting health conditions, or the deceased’s own conduct caused the death, not the kratom product.

To establish causation, your attorney must show that the kratom product was a substantial factor in causing the death. This does not require proving kratom was the sole cause—only that it played a significant role. Medical evidence, toxicology reports, and expert testimony are used to demonstrate the causal link between the product and the death.

Common Defenses in Kratom Wrongful Death Cases

Defendants in kratom wrongful death cases use several strategies to avoid liability or reduce damages. Understanding these defenses helps families prepare for the legal challenges they may face.

Manufacturers often argue that the deceased assumed the risk of using kratom or that the deceased’s own negligence contributed to the death. They may claim the deceased ignored warnings, misused the product, or combined kratom with other substances against medical advice.

Assumption of Risk

Assumption of risk is a defense that claims the deceased knowingly and voluntarily accepted the dangers associated with using kratom. Defendants argue that kratom’s risks are well-known, warnings were provided, and the deceased chose to use the product anyway.

This defense is difficult to prove when kratom products lack adequate warnings or when the manufacturer actively marketed the product as safe and natural. If the deceased had no way of knowing about specific risks like contamination or dangerously high alkaloid levels, assumption of risk does not apply.

Comparative Negligence

Nevada follows a comparative negligence rule under NRS 41.141, which reduces a plaintiff’s damages by their percentage of fault. If the court finds the deceased was partially responsible for their own death, the damages award is reduced accordingly.

Defendants may argue the deceased was comparatively negligent by using kratom despite known health conditions, combining kratom with other substances, exceeding recommended doses, or ignoring medical advice. If the deceased is found 50% or less at fault, the family can still recover damages reduced by the deceased’s percentage of fault. If the deceased is found more than 50% at fault, the family recovers nothing.

Intervening Cause

Defendants sometimes argue that an intervening cause—an unforeseeable event or action that occurred after the defendant’s conduct—was the actual cause of death. For example, they may claim that the deceased’s decision to take prescription medications or consume alcohol broke the chain of causation.

This defense fails if the intervening cause was foreseeable or if the kratom product itself created the dangerous condition that led to the death. Courts typically reject intervening cause arguments when the defendant’s conduct set the harm in motion.

Product Misuse

Defendants may claim the deceased misused the kratom product in a way that was unforeseeable and not intended by the manufacturer. However, manufacturers have a duty to anticipate reasonably foreseeable misuse and design products or warnings to prevent harm even when misuse occurs.

If the alleged misuse was predictable—such as taking higher doses than recommended to achieve stronger effects—this defense will not succeed. Manufacturers cannot escape liability simply by claiming the deceased did not follow instructions when the instructions were inadequate or the product was inherently dangerous.

The Role of FDA Warnings and Regulatory Actions

The FDA has issued numerous warnings about kratom’s dangers and has taken enforcement actions against kratom manufacturers and distributors. These regulatory actions can serve as powerful evidence in wrongful death cases.

Since 2016, the FDA has warned consumers about kratom’s risks including respiratory depression, seizures, liver damage, addiction, and death. The agency has identified kratom as a contributing factor in hundreds of overdose deaths and has linked kratom products to Salmonella outbreaks.

FDA Warning Letters to Kratom Companies

The FDA has sent warning letters to dozens of kratom companies for making unapproved drug claims, selling adulterated or misbranded products, and failing to comply with current good manufacturing practices. Warning letters identify specific violations and provide evidence that the manufacturer knew or should have known about safety problems.

In wrongful death cases, warning letters issued to the defendant company can demonstrate that the company was on notice of risks and failed to correct them. This evidence supports claims of negligence, failure to warn, and punitive damages.

CDC Reports on Kratom-Related Deaths

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has published multiple reports documenting kratom’s role in overdose deaths. These reports provide epidemiological data, toxicology findings, and public health recommendations that can be cited as authoritative evidence in litigation.

CDC data showing a pattern of deaths linked to kratom products strengthens arguments that kratom is unreasonably dangerous and that manufacturers have a duty to provide warnings.

Import Alerts and Product Seizures

The FDA has issued import alerts for kratom products and has seized shipments at the border due to contamination or unapproved health claims. If the kratom product involved in a wrongful death case was subject to an import alert or seizure, this evidence demonstrates the product’s dangerous nature.

Import alerts and seizures can also establish that the manufacturer or distributor violated federal law, supporting claims of negligence and punitive damages.

Why Families Choose to Pursue Wrongful Death Claims

Losing a loved one to kratom is devastating, and many families initially feel overwhelmed by grief and unsure whether to pursue legal action. Wrongful death claims serve multiple important purposes beyond financial compensation.

Holding manufacturers and sellers accountable sends a message that dangerous products will not be tolerated and that companies must prioritize consumer safety over profit. Successful lawsuits often lead to changes in product design, improved warnings, recalls, and increased regulatory scrutiny.

Financial Security for the Family

Wrongful death damages provide financial stability for families who lost a wage earner, caregiver, or source of support. Compensation helps cover immediate expenses like funeral costs and ongoing needs like mortgage payments, childcare, and education.

For families with young children, wrongful death damages can replace decades of lost income and ensure the children have the resources they need to thrive. For elderly parents who lost an adult child, damages can cover the loss of financial support and assistance they depended on.

Justice and Accountability

Families often describe the pursuit of a wrongful death claim as a way to honor their loved one’s memory and ensure their death was not in vain. By exposing unsafe practices and forcing companies to change, families protect others from suffering the same loss.

Accountability is especially important in kratom cases because the industry has resisted regulation and continues to market products as safe despite mounting evidence of harm. Wrongful death verdicts and settlements create financial consequences that force companies to take safety seriously.

Validation and Closure

The legal process provides families with answers about how and why their loved one died. Discovery, expert testimony, and trial proceedings bring to light facts that families may not have known, including the extent of contamination in kratom products, the manufacturer’s knowledge of risks, and the preventability of the death.

For many families, knowing that they fought for justice and held the responsible parties accountable brings a sense of closure and peace.

Choosing a Reno Kratom Wrongful Death Attorney

Kratom wrongful death cases are complex and require an attorney with experience in product liability litigation, wrongful death law, and the ability to navigate scientific and medical evidence. The attorney you choose will significantly impact the outcome of your case.

Look for an attorney who has successfully handled wrongful death claims, understands Nevada wrongful death statutes, and has access to the expert witnesses and resources needed to build a compelling case. The attorney should also have trial experience, as defendants may refuse to settle without the threat of a jury verdict.

Experience with Product Liability and Wrongful Death

An attorney who regularly handles product liability and wrongful death cases will understand how to identify all potential defendants, establish liability under Nevada law, and maximize damages. They will know how to work with toxicologists, medical examiners, and product testing laboratories to build the strongest possible case.

Ask potential attorneys about their experience with cases involving dietary supplements, unregulated products, and contaminated consumer goods. Kratom cases share similarities with wrongful death claims involving other dangerous supplements like DMAA, ephedra, and tianeptine.

Resources to Handle Complex Litigation

Kratom wrongful death cases require significant upfront investment in expert witnesses, product testing, medical record review, and discovery. The attorney you choose should have the financial resources to fund the case without passing costs on to the family until the case is won.

Large defendants like kratom manufacturers and distributors often retain teams of defense lawyers and experts. Your attorney should have the resources and experience to level the playing field and stand up to well-funded corporate defendants.

Compassion and Communication

Losing a loved one is traumatic, and the legal process can feel overwhelming. Choose an attorney who treats your family with compassion, communicates clearly, and keeps you informed at every stage of the case.

Your attorney should be accessible, responsive to your questions, and willing to explain complex legal and medical issues in plain language. The attorney-client relationship should feel like a partnership built on trust and mutual respect.

Contingency Fee Representation

Most wrongful death attorneys work on a contingency fee basis, meaning the family pays no attorney fees unless the case is won. The attorney’s fee is typically a percentage of the recovery, and all case expenses are advanced by the attorney.

Contingency fee representation allows families to pursue justice without financial risk and ensures the attorney is motivated to secure the highest possible recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions About Kratom Wrongful Death Claims in Nevada

Can I file a wrongful death claim if my loved one used kratom voluntarily?

Yes, you can file a wrongful death claim even if your loved one used kratom voluntarily. Voluntary use does not prevent liability if the product was defective, contaminated, or sold without adequate warnings. Nevada wrongful death law recognizes that manufacturers have a duty to provide safe products and warn consumers about risks even when the consumer chooses to use the product.

If your loved one did not know about the specific dangers of the kratom product they used—such as contamination, mislabeling, or dangerously high alkaloid levels—the manufacturer’s failure to warn may support liability. Defendants may argue assumption of risk or comparative negligence, but these defenses often fail when warnings were inadequate or the product was marketed as safe.

How long do I have to file a kratom wrongful death lawsuit in Nevada?

Nevada law under NRS 11.190 requires wrongful death claims to be filed within two years from the date of death. This deadline is strictly enforced, and missing it will result in the dismissal of your case. Because kratom wrongful death cases require extensive investigation, expert analysis, and product testing, it is important to consult with an attorney as soon as possible.

The earlier you begin the legal process, the more time your attorney has to gather evidence, identify all liable parties, and build a strong case. Evidence can be lost, witnesses’ memories can fade, and defendants may destroy documents if too much time passes.

What if my loved one had other drugs or alcohol in their system at the time of death?

The presence of other substances does not automatically prevent a wrongful death claim. Many kratom deaths involve polydrug toxicity, meaning the combination of kratom with other substances caused the death. If kratom was a substantial factor in the death, you may still pursue a claim even if other substances contributed.

Toxicologists and medical experts can explain how kratom interacted with other substances to cause respiratory depression or other fatal effects. If the kratom product lacked warnings about drug interactions or if the manufacturer knew kratom was frequently combined with other substances, failure to warn claims may succeed.

Can I sue the store where my loved one bought kratom?

Yes, retailers can be held liable in wrongful death cases under product liability and negligence theories. Retailers who sell defective or dangerous products can be held strictly liable even if they did not manufacture the product. If the store sold kratom knowing it was contaminated, mislabeled, or dangerous, negligence claims may also apply.

In some cases, suing the retailer provides a more accessible defendant than a foreign manufacturer. Retailers typically carry liability insurance and may be more willing to settle. Your attorney will identify all potentially liable parties, including manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers, and retailers, to maximize your recovery.

How much is a kratom wrongful death case worth?

The value of a kratom wrongful death case depends on multiple factors including the deceased’s age, income, life expectancy, and the strength of the evidence. Cases involving younger victims with high earning potential and strong family relationships typically result in higher damages. Cases with clear evidence of contamination, mislabeling, or manufacturer misconduct also tend to recover more.

Economic damages include lost income, loss of household services, and funeral expenses, which can be calculated with reasonable precision. Non-economic damages for loss of companionship and emotional suffering are more subjective and vary based on the relationship and circumstances. Punitive damages may significantly increase the total recovery if the defendant’s conduct was particularly egregious.

Do I have to go to trial, or will the case settle?

Many wrongful death cases settle before trial, but whether your case settles depends on the strength of the evidence, the defendant’s willingness to negotiate, and your willingness to accept the settlement offer. Some defendants refuse to offer fair settlements and force cases to trial.

Your attorney will negotiate aggressively on your behalf and advise you on whether a settlement offer is fair based on the damages and strength of your case. If the defendant refuses to offer adequate compensation, your attorney should be prepared to take the case to trial and present your case to a jury.

What if the kratom manufacturer is overseas?

Many kratom products are manufactured in Southeast Asia, but U.S. distributors, importers, and retailers can still be held liable. Nevada’s long-arm jurisdiction statute allows courts to exercise jurisdiction over out-of-state and foreign defendants who sell products in Nevada. Your attorney can sue the U.S.-based importer, distributor, or retailer, who may then seek contribution from the foreign manufacturer.

Even if the manufacturer is overseas, product liability law allows claims against anyone in the distribution chain who sold the defective product. Your attorney will identify all reachable defendants with sufficient assets or insurance to pay damages.

Will filing a wrongful death lawsuit interfere with a criminal investigation?

Wrongful death lawsuits are civil cases separate from any criminal investigation. Filing a civil lawsuit does not interfere with a criminal investigation, and the two cases proceed independently. In some situations, criminal charges may be filed against manufacturers or sellers for homicide, manslaughter, or selling adulterated drugs.

A criminal conviction can be powerful evidence in a civil wrongful death case, but you do not need to wait for criminal charges to file your lawsuit. The statute of limitations for wrongful death claims may expire before criminal charges are resolved, so it is important to consult with an attorney promptly.

Contact a Reno Kratom Wrongful Death Attorney Today

If your family lost a loved one to kratom poisoning or overdose in Reno, you deserve answers, justice, and compensation. Life Justice Law Group has the experience, resources, and commitment to hold kratom manufacturers and sellers accountable for the harm they cause. We understand the pain and devastation your family is facing, and we are here to guide you through every step of the legal process with compassion and expertise.

Our firm handles kratom wrongful death cases on a contingency fee basis, so you pay no attorney fees unless we win your case. We offer free consultations and case evaluations, and we are available to meet with you at a time and place that is convenient for your family. Call Life Justice Law Group today at (480) 378-8088 or complete our online form to speak with a Reno kratom wrongful death lawyer who will fight for the justice your family deserves.