Marc D Grossman

Marc D. Grossman, Esq.
Marc D. Grossman is a New York and New Jersey personal injury attorney. He is currently a Senior Partner at The Sanders Law Firm with primary areas on focus on defective drugs and product liability, where he represents clients who have been harmed by medical products and medications. He also represents medical providers in suits against insurance companies. Grossman is admitted to the bar in New York, New Jersey, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, where he practices law in the State and US District Courts.
Biography
Grossman was born in Oceanside, New York in January 1968. Before he began his law career in 1993, he interned at the United Nations Law Department. Dedicating himself to product liability and defective drug cases, he studied the ways in which large numbers of clients could be helped by attorneys who were able to win cases against the manufacturers of these dangerous devices and products. Using that knowledge, he began working in law firms and placed his focus on mass tort litigation and class-action suits.
Grossman is currently within the Top 10 List of Attorneys with the Largest Volume of Mass Tort Clients in the United States, Among the Top 5 Attorneys Currently Appointed and Working on the most Plaintiffs' Steering Committees in the United States.
Grossman currently resides in Puerto Rico with his wife, Stephanie, and their four children. He has opened a law office, affiliated with The Sanders Firm, on the Island.
Education
Grossman received his bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan in 1989 and his MBA from Zicklin School of Business at Baruch College in 1993. His legal education came from interning in the Law Department of the United Nations while he attended law school; he received his JD from Brooklyn Law School in 1993.
* Esquire Bank
Practice
Currently, Grossman is a Senior Partner at Sanders, Sanders, Block, Woycik, Viener, & Grossman, P.C., as well as a Senior partner at Sanders, Viener, Grossman LLP. He is also an educational speaker to groups of attorneys, victims, and medical providers.
He hosts approximately 20 educational seminars, and has spoken at events for the Mass Tort Trial Lawyers Association, Mass Tort Medical School, New York State Trial Lawyers Association, and Leaders Forum of the American Association of Justice. He has also appeared in local and national forums, been quoted in those forums, and been quoted in the media. He is a member of the National Trial Lawyers Association and has had the distinction of being named one of the Top 100 Trial Lawyers in New York State. His landmark cases include Boles v. Merck, where he, along with his co-counsel, won an $8 million verdict for a victim of Fosamax, and Rosenberg v. Merck, where he served as lead attorney in the bellwether New Jersey case.
Recent Litigation
Recently, Grossman has litigated cases regarding medical providers against insurers, and has also been involved in cases involving lead paint, asbestos, and mold, as well as defective drugs and products. Many of the cases in which Grossman has been recently involved have been a part of multi-district litigation. These cases include:
* Vioxx litigation in New Jersey Superior Court involving a liaison between hundreds of attorneys representing thousands of litigants and the press, where Grossman and his law firm represented approximately 300 Vioxx plaintiffs. Ultimately Merck, the manufacturer of Vioxx, settled for $4.95 billion, one of the largest civil settlements in American history.
* Avandia litigation involving 600 victims in Pennsylvania, where Grossman became a member of the steering committee for attorneys representing victims against Glaxo SmithKline Beecham.
* OxyContin litigation involving 400 victims in New Jersey and California.
* Levaquin and Fosamax in New Jersey.
* Chantix (Champix)
* Propecia
* Reglan
* Risperdal
* Other MDL cases in which Grossman has been involved include implantable defibrillators, Ortho Evra, Stand 'N Seal, Zicam, Depuy Pinnacle and the Kugel Mesh Hernia Patch, Benicar as well as Medtronic and Crestor.
 
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