Jeremy Tor represents ordinary individuals severely injured or killed by the wrongful conduct of others. When someone in our community acts irresponsibly and causes serious harm, they must make it right. Jeremy believes the civil justice is among the best ways to help right a wrong.

Jeremy handles a variety of cases, including: civil rights, wrongful death, professional malpractice (including medical malpractice), motor vehicle crashes, and premises liability. He has significant litigation experience, from discovery to trial to the court of appeals. Jeremy has argued cases in state and federal appellate courts, including the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

sample of Jeremy’s cases include:

• $28 million wrongful death jury verdict in Cincinnati, the highest wrongful death verdict in Ohio history.
• $400,000 jury verdict on behalf of a temp worker whose thumb was amputated while working on an unguarded machine at a plastics manufacturer. The case settled before starting the punitive damages phase of trial.
• Six-figure settlements on behalf of:
• A bicyclist who broke her leg after being struck by a car whose driver fled the scene.
• A wife and husband who were rear-ended at a violent rate of speed by a careless driver.
• A bicyclist who struck a practically invisible wire that a construction company had strung across a road. After striking the wire, he flew over the handle-bars and landed headfirst, fracturing multiple vertebrae.
• A mall patron who slipped and fell on ice on the sidewalk outside a large mall, breaking her kneecap. Thirty minutes prior, another patron slipped and fell on the same patch of ice, yet the mall cops did nothing to fix, or even warn patrons about the hidden danger. The lawsuit included a claim for punitive damages.
• A worker who suffered debilitating lead poisoning after months of removing layers of paint because the general contractor violated multiple OSHA regulations, including the requirement to supply lead-safety protective gear.
• $300,000 settlement in a civil right case involving three individuals who were wrongfully arrested for obstruction of justice.
• Race discrimination case on behalf of a large, extended African-American family that was evicted from a hotel in Florida the first morning of their weeklong trip, which was their annual family reunion.
• Podiatric malpractice case on behalf of a patient who underwent unnecessary and excessive surgery, resulting in a permanent, disabling injury. The case settled on the fifth day of trial, right before the defendant-podiatrist was about to testify.
• Medical malpractice case on behalf of surrogate mother whose out-of-state doctor failed to diagnose an ectopic pregnancy, resulting in life-threatening hemorrhaging.
• Medical malpractice case on behalf of a woman who was wrongly diagnosed with terminal, metastatic cancer because the radiologist mixed up her records with another patient’s.
His excessive force cases include:
• Fatal police shooting. A man was shot twice by a police officer in the back while running away and pulling up his pants, which were below his bare buttocks. The man died at the scene.
• In-custody death. A jail inmate experiencing a medical episode was handcuffed in a prone (face down) position while 8 corrections officers surrounded him and several applied pressure to his legs, back, shoulders, and neck until he suffocated to death.
• Fatal police shooting. A young man called 911 because his apartment was being burglarized but was shot dead by the very police he had called for help.

Jeremy is privileged to represent U.S. soldiers and Gold Star families in a lawsuit against some of the world’s most powerful banks. The lawsuit, brought by a team of top-flight trial lawyers and firms, seeks to hold the banks accountable under the Anti-Terrorism Act and the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act for providing material support (to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars) to Iran and its de facto terrorism arm, Hezbollah, who collectively waged a campaign of terrorism in Iraq against Coalition forces beginning in 2003.

Jeremy is part of the team litigating claims against the companies who manufacture and distribute opiates-and who helped spawn the opioid epidemic-in the nationwide opiate Multidistrict Litigation (MDL), which is pending in federal court in the Northern District of Ohio.

Before joining the Spangenberg firm, Jeremy served as a federal law clerk. He received his law degree in 2011 from the University of Virginia. Upon graduation, he was awarded the Eppa Hunton IV Memorial Book Award, which is given by the faculty to one graduating student “who has demonstrated unusual aptitude in litigation courses and shown a keen awareness and understanding of the lawyer’s ethical and professional responsibility.”

Before law school, Jeremy was a Teach For America corps member in Baltimore, where he taught Spanish to high school students at a public school in west Baltimore and earned a Master’s in teaching from Johns Hopkins University.
Jeremy went to college on a full-ride at the University of Arizona, obtaining a dual Bachelor’s degree in Political Science and Spanish, graduating with Honors, summa cum laude, and receiving the Outstanding Senior Award as the top Political Science graduate. Jeremy was President and Captain of his college mock trial team, participating in numerous tournaments across the country and earning nearly a dozen Outstanding Attorney awards.

Nick DiCello is a partner at Spangenberg, Shibley & Liber, LLP in Cleveland, Ohio, where he has practiced since completing a federal clerkship in 2004. As a trial lawyer, Nick handles and tries many different kinds of cases. For the last 10 years he has headed up Spangenberg’s civil rights practice and has received Best Lawyers’® Lawyer of the Year award in the area of Civil Rights twice over the past 3 years.

Nick litigates, argues and tries civil rights cases, primarily in federal court, in Ohio and around the country. Nick’s cases and the stories of some of his clients have been featured on the Today Show and on the cover of the Huffington Post. He has argued extensively in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in civil rights cases, primarily arguing against the application of qualified immunity. Representative cases include a $4 million settlement for the family of a mentally ill man who was pepper sprayed and strapped into a restraint chair in a Florida jail, resulting in his death, a $4 million settlement for the family of a 28 year-old man who died after he was held down prone for more than 20 minutes while in the midst of a medical episode in a county Jail in southern Ohio, a $2.6 million settlement on behalf of the family of a schizophrenic 32 year-old man who was beaten and restrained in a restraint chair in a county jail and died, and a $1.65 million settlement for a man who was shot in the back while trying to flee a drug bust in West Virginia.

Nick has argued numerous cases at the Sixth Circuit and defended against a petition to the USSC. Several of Nick’s cases have furthered the protections afforded citizens during encounters with police and have limited the use of tasers, deadly force, and prone restraint by officers under certain circumstances.

Chas Short defends clients accused of white collar crime in Federal and Florida state proceedings. His defense of white collar prosecutions and investigations include those involving Foreign Corrupt Practices Act issues, alleged health care fraud, tax allegations, and other accusations of business crimes.

In addition to Mr. Short’s representation of clients in connection with white collar investigations and prosecutions, he also conducts corporate internal investigations and assists businesses in developing compliance programs.
Chas Short is a partner at the white collar criminal defense firm Calli Law, located in Miami.

Cashton L. Sessler is a respected Seattle attorney who is dedicated to representing his clients.

Cash began his career in a small personal-injury firm in 1986. He later left private practice to gain trial experience as a Whatcom County Deputy Prosecutor. After a brief tenure at an insurance-defense firm, Cash opened Cashton L. Sessler, P.S. in 1991. For the past 20 plus years he has been dedicated to representing individuals in criminal-defense and personal-injury cases.

One of Cash’s defining advantages is that he has worked as a prosecutor and a criminal-defense attorney, an insurance-defense lawyer and a personal-injury attorney. His experience working both sides of the issues helps him better understand the strengths and weaknesses of each client’s case.

As a criminal-defense attorney Cash knows from experience that prosecutors respect attorneys who prepare each case as if it is going to trial, so that is how he approaches each case. Cash has personally and successfully represented hundreds of individuals charged with a variety of crimes across Washington over the last two plus decades.

As a personal-injury attorney Cash knows that attention to detail often means the difference between a fair settlement and an unjust one. He thoroughly investigates each case and he takes time to prepare each client for every step of the process.

Education
Washington University, J.D. (1985)
Grinnell College, B.A (1981)

Admitted
Washington State Bar
United States District Court, Western Washington
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit

Membership
2014 to the present Top 100 Trial Lawyers, The National Trial Lawyers

Joshua J. Hertz received a B.A. from the University of South Carolina in 1997 with a double major in Accountant and Management. Received his J.D. from St. Thomas Law School in 2001. Started his law firm directly out of law school concentrating in the field of personal injury.

He is the Past President of the Young Lawyers Division of the Dade County Bar Association 2009-2010. The founder and Chair of the Solo and small firm for Dade County Bar Association 2012-2020. Lectures on how to start your own firm for the local South Florida Law Schools. A member of the Florida Bar Executive committee for Solo and Small firm 2015-2020. President-Elect for the Miami Lakes Bar Association 2020 and past Treasurer and Board Member. Co-founder and past President of the Dominican American Bar Association 2016-2020. Graduate of the Florida Bar Leadership Academy, Class I 2013-2014. On the Board of Advisor for St. Thomas Law School – 2002-2020.

Kyle Kinberger is the Chief Revenue Officer for HMR and manages Sales Operations around the country for the organization. He currently oversees the daily operations of business done in the 40 states where they currently operate.

Kyle has been with HMR since 2012 and has been in the medical funding space for over 16 years. HMR has had the opportunity to fund several thousand cases with a primary concentration on funding TBI and catastrophic injury cases for plaintiffs who are uninsured.

Susan L. Swint M.D., Louisville PM&R and Resilient Life Care.

Dr. Swint is a board certified physiatrist through the American Board of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. She is licensed in the state of Kentucky where she owns Louisville PM&R, PLLC, a physiatry consulting service. Dr. Swint sees a wide variety of patients including traumatic brain injury, orthopedics, stroke, spinal cord injury, and neurological disease such as Parkinson’s, etc.
Under Louisville PM&R she joined Resilient Life Care as Medical Director in Dec 2018. RLC is a brain injury group home in LaGrange, KY.

Dr. Swint understands that an injury such as TBI can be devastating to a patient and their loved ones, as there are many complexities to this type of injury. She enjoys helping patients navigate through these chronic, yet fluid, changes by prescribing appropriate therapies, medications, and specialty services that often times are needed for these patients. She finds that spending time with the patient, their support system, and the entire rehab team is vitally important to really understanding the person as a whole through their rehab recovery.

EDUCATION

• Undergraduate- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1996-2000 B.A. in Exercise and Sport Science.
• Medical school-University of Kentucky 2001- 2005
• President of Medical School class 2001-2005
• Intern year-Internal Medicine-University of Louisville 2005-2006
• Residency- Carolinas Rehabilitation 2006-2009- training in a “TBI model system” at Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, NC.
• Chief Resident 2008-2009.

Personal interests include spending time with her family, including her husband and 3 children. She is an avid runner and has completed several marathons. She also enjoys travel, particularly to the beach and the Carolinas, and loves horse racing – especially The Kentucky Derby.

Hugo L. Chanez, Esq. partner at Mitchell Sanchez.

Mr. Chanez is a partner at Mitchell Sanchez in New Orleans, Louisiana. He holds an LLM from Queen Mary University in London. Has practiced law in the United Kingdom, European Community, and United States of America. He is also Fellow of the American Board of Trial Advocates’ program at Harvard Law School. He is a part of the National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40.

Professionally, he has a national practice, prosecuting traumatic brain injury cases in several states including Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, Texas, Colorado, and Illinois. His efforts have yielded several high profile TBI cases resulting in multi-million dollar verdicts and confidential settlements. He understands how to build damage models that yield high damage awards and settlements and can withstand appellate scrutiny.

In 2005, Mr. Chanez earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Tulane University and was a member of the Alpha Sigma Lambda Honor Society, the Pi Sigma Alpha Honor Association, and the Pi Alpha Beta National History Honor Society. In 2009, he earned his Juris Doctor from Loyola University New Orleans College of Law where he graduated with honors. In 2010, he earned his Masters of Law (L.L.M.) with Merit Honors from Queen Mary University in London, UK with a specialization in Antitrust Law. He is fluent in English and Spanish and is currently learning French.

HONORS & AWARDS

• Frank Deutschmann Award
• Police Jury Association Award
• Law Excellence Award

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS

• Hispanic National Bar Association
• Hispanic Lawyers Association of Louisiana
• Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Louisiana

EDUCATION

• B.A. – Tulane Univers ity
• J.D. – Loyola College of Law , with Honors
• L.L.M. – Queen Mary University, London, UK, with Merit Honors

BAR ADMISSIONS

• Louisiana
• Louisiana Supreme Court

Jeremiah Lowe is a senior trial attorney and partner at Gomez Trial Attorneys who dedicates his practice to helping victims of personal injury, with a specialty in spinal and orthopedic injury. Having a mom who is a therapist and a dad who is a trial lawyer, Jeremiah grew up seeing firsthand how they helped people through traumatic life circumstances, which helped shape Jeremiah’s passion of helping victims of trauma from an early age.

Jeremiah earned his law degree from California Western School of Law in 2005.
Since joining Gomez Trial Attorneys in 2009, Jeremiah has managed to resolve hundreds of cases with favorable results. He has also had tremendous success taking cases to trial. Since 2018, Jeremiah obtained several seven figure verdicts totaling over $12 million, including a $7 million wrongful death verdict against a residential drug & alcohol rehab. His success in the courtroom and in settling cases comes from working closely with his clients to understand not only the facts of the case but who the client is to understand their needs during such challenging circumstances in life.

Jeremiah has been recognized by the San Diego legal community for his many accomplishments including:

• 2019 – Selected as “Trial Lawyer of the Year” by Consumer Attorneys of San Diego (CASD)
• 2017 – 2019: Received Three “Outstanding Trial Lawyer Awards” (OTLAs) from CASD
• 2016-2019 – Selected by Super Lawyers as a “Super Lawyer”
• 2015 – Selected by Super Lawyers as a “Rising Star”
• 2012-2013 – Selected by the Daily Transcript as a “Top Attorney”

Jeremiah believes that it is important to give back to the San Diego community. He has been serving on the board of directors for Consumer Attorneys of San Diego (CASD) for the last five years, currently serving as the co-chair of the community outreach program. He also currently serves on the board of directors of the Orthopedic Spine Injury Association, a non-profit organization, which donates all proceeds to charities supporting orthopedic and spine injury victims.

In the past Jeremiah has also volunteered time to charitable organizations including the San Diego Legal Aid Society as well as non-profit organizations providing resources and support to children with autism. Jeremiah was recognized by the Board of Governors of the State Bar of California in 2010 for his charitable contributions, receiving the Manuel Wiley Award for Pro Bono Services.

Jeremiah’s greatest interest, however, is spending quality time outdoors with his wife Sarah and two daughters Natalie (5) and Emily (1). Spending time with family and being connected with nature has always been a big part of Jeremiah’s life.

Takisha D. Richardson is an attorney at Cohen Milstein and a member of the firm’s Sexual Abuse, Sex Trafficking and Domestic Violence team. She is dedicated to representing survivors of sexual crimes, including child and adult victims and adult survivors of child sexual abuse. Takisha has vast trial experience. To date, she has tried more than 100 jury and non-jury trials, most of which involved sexual abuse and/or homicide matters.