Tuesday, April 28, 2026

May 28: The Next Wave: Navigating Emerging Mass Torts and the Data Behind the Docket

Description:
Mass tort litigation rarely moves in a straight line. New products, developing scientific theories, and access to sophisticated data can quickly turn a small number of claims into nationwide dockets.

The Next Wave: Navigating Emerging Mass Torts and the Data Behind the Docket
focuses on how early mass tort activity is taking shape. We’ll look at already developing tort dockets, including GLP-1 drugs, PFAS, hair relaxers, Roundup, and Depo-Provera claims.

More specifically, we’ll look at where cases are landing, how those dockets are building, and shifts in plaintiff-side tactics.

Large datasets can get messy fast! Multi-jurisdictional filings, overlapping parties, different insureds tied to the same matter… It’s not always clean, and when we add in diverse claimant populations, multiple carriers, and multi-year timelines, it gets harder to track consistently.

Our data expert will tackle data issues from a nuts-and-bolts standpoint.

The Next Wave: Navigating Emerging Mass Torts and the Data Behind the Docket is intended for attorneys, claims professionals, and insurance teams dealing with complex litigation. Our panelists will focus on how docket activity is actually being used in practice and where it can lead to faulty assumptions when evaluating litigation strategy, coverage considerations, and overall exposure.

Title:
The Next Wave: Navigating Emerging Mass Torts and the Data Behind the Docket

Date And Time:
Thursday, May 28, 2026
1–2 PM ET | Noon–1 PM CT | 11 AM–Noon MT | 10–11 AM PT

Register Now for this free Continuing Legal Education Webinar!

Speakers:
  • Barry Trilla, Director for Quantitative Services, Alan Gray.
  • John Delascio, Esq., Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP.
  • Leslie Lombardy, Esq., O’Toole Scrivo, LLC.
  • Stacey White, AVP, Direct Claims, Resolute Management, Inc.

CLE Credit:
Complimentary registration comes with CLE credit in one state and will be available in California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Texas.
You may be able to self-apply in other states.

By:
Perrin Conferences.

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