4th of July brings increased danger on the road

For many families in West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, and across Florida, the Fourth of July means cookouts, fireworks, beach days, road trips, and celebrations with friends. But Independence Day can also bring serious traffic risks.

Holiday crash risks rise when alcohol, late-night driving, speeding, distraction, tourists, teen drivers, and crowded roads overlap.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, motor vehicle crashes killed 2,719 people during Fourth of July holiday periods from 2020 through 2024. Of the drivers killed, 38% were drunk. NHTSA also warns that even a small amount of alcohol can affect driving ability.

The National Safety Council estimates that 410 people may die on U.S. roads during the 2026 Independence Day holiday period. That period runs from 6 p.m. Thursday, July 2, through 11:59 p.m. Sunday, July 5. NSC also estimates that 46,700 people may suffer medically consulted injuries during that same period.

At Romano Law Group, our family-owned personal injury law firm has seen how quickly a holiday weekend can turn into a life-changing crisis. A preventable crash can leave victims facing emergency medical care, surgery, missed work, long-term pain, and emotional trauma.

When a drunk, distracted, speeding, or reckless driver causes a crash, injured people and their families deserve clear answers about their rights.

Why Do Fourth of July Car Accidents Increase?

Fourth of July crash risks increase because several dangers often happen at the same time.

More people travel during the holiday weekend. Many drivers use unfamiliar roads. Celebrations often involve alcohol. People may drive home late at night after fireworks, parties, beach events, or family gatherings.

Even careful drivers face added risk. Other drivers may be tired, distracted, impaired, impatient, or unfamiliar with local roads.

In South Florida, holiday traffic can be especially heavy. Roads near downtown West Palm Beach, coastal areas, beaches, restaurants, entertainment districts, I-95, Florida’s Turnpike, and Okeechobee Boulevard may become crowded during Independence Day celebrations.

The Fourth of July also falls during the “100 Deadliest Days,” the period between Memorial Day and Labor Day when crash risks rise for teen drivers. AAA reported that 13,135 people died in crashes involving teen drivers from 2019 through 2023. More than 30% of those deaths happened during the period between Memorial Day and Labor Day.

AAA also reported that, on average, eight people die each day in teen-driver-involved crashes during the summer. During the rest of the year, the average is seven deaths per day.

For Florida families, this matters. Summer brings tourists, beach traffic, event traffic, young drivers out of school, motorcycles, pedestrians, bicyclists, and rideshare congestion.

Why Is Drunk Driving So Dangerous During the Fourth of July?

Alcohol-impaired driving remains one of the most serious risks around Independence Day.

NHTSA’s Fourth of July safety campaign emphasizes a simple rule: a sober driver is someone who has not consumed alcohol at all. The sober driver should not be the person who had the least to drink.

NHTSA also recommends planning a sober ride before drinking. It encourages people to take keys from someone who may drive impaired, call 911 if they safely observe an impaired driver, and always wear a seat belt.

Drunk driving crashes can cause devastating injuries. Impaired drivers may speed, drift between lanes, run red lights, drive the wrong way, or react too slowly.

These crashes can injure pedestrians, motorcyclists, cyclists, passengers, and families traveling home from holiday events.

Common injuries may include:

  • Traumatic brain injuries
  • Concussions
  • Spinal cord injuries
  • Neck and back injuries
  • Broken bones
  • Internal injuries
  • Burns
  • Soft tissue injuries
  • Emotional trauma
  • Wrongful death

Romano Law Group’s auto accident attorneys handle drunk driving accident claims as part of the firm’s broader auto accident practice. Auto accidents can leave victims with physical injuries, emotional stress, medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and property damage.

What Should You Do After a Fourth of July Car Accident?

The moments after a crash can feel confusing and overwhelming. Your health and safety should come first.

If you are injured in a Fourth of July weekend crash, call 911. Move to a safe location if you can do so safely. Request medical attention, even if your injuries seem minor at first.

Adrenaline can hide pain. Symptoms may get worse later.

After a crash, you should:

  • Call law enforcement
  • Get medical attention
  • Exchange information with the other driver
  • Take photos and videos of the scene
  • Get witness names and contact information
  • Save insurance information
  • Avoid admitting fault
  • Avoid guessing about your injuries
  • Speak with an experienced auto accident attorney before accepting a settlement

If the other driver appears impaired, tell the responding officer what you observed. Important details may include the smell of alcohol, slurred speech, open containers, erratic driving, or an admission of drinking.

These details may become important evidence later.

What Evidence Matters After a Fourth of July Drunk Driving Accident?

Evidence can make a major difference after a serious holiday crash.

Important evidence may include:

  • Police reports
  • DUI arrest records
  • Body camera footage
  • Dashcam footage
  • Surveillance video
  • 911 records
  • Witness statements
  • Photos of the crash scene
  • Photos of vehicle damage
  • Toxicology results
  • Crash reconstruction
  • Vehicle data
  • Medical records
  • Insurance information
  • Some evidence can disappear quickly. Surveillance footage may get erased. Witnesses may become harder to find. Vehicles may get repaired or destroyed.

An attorney can help preserve evidence, investigate fault, and identify all available insurance coverage.

Who May Be Responsible After a Drunk Driving Crash?

In many cases, the impaired driver bears primary responsibility. But some crashes involve more than one responsible party.

A full investigation may ask:

  • Was the driver operating a company vehicle?
  • Did the crash involve multiple vehicles?
  • Was a rideshare driver involved?
  • Was a commercial vehicle or truck involved?
  • Did poor lighting, construction, or road hazards contribute?
  • Did a vehicle defect play a role?
  • Was the driver uninsured or underinsured?

In Florida, alcohol-related liability may also raise questions about social host liability or alcohol service laws.

Romano Law Group has previously discussed Florida social host liability. Florida law treats private hosts differently from commercial alcohol vendors. Florida’s “Open House Party Statute” can create liability issues involving underage drinking at house parties. Dram shop liability is different and may apply to certain commercial alcohol sellers.

Because drunk driving cases can be fact-specific, injured people should not assume only one source of recovery exists. A thorough investigation may identify all responsible parties and all available insurance coverage.

What Injuries Are Common in Holiday Weekend Crashes?

Fourth of July crashes can cause serious harm, especially when alcohol, speeding, or late-night driving plays a role.

Common injuries include:

  • Head injuries
  • Brain injuries
  • Whiplash
  • Neck injuries
  • Back injuries
  • Spinal cord injuries
  • Fractures
  • Shoulder and knee injuries
  • Internal bleeding
  • Burns
  • Facial injuries
  • Scarring
  • Emotional trauma

Some injuries do not appear right away. Headaches, dizziness, stiffness, numbness, confusion, and soreness may develop hours or days later.

Medical care protects your health. It also creates records that may help connect your injuries to the crash.

How Can Drivers, Hosts, Parents, and Passengers Help Prevent Holiday Crashes?

Many serious holiday crashes are preventable. Before celebrating, decide how everyone will get home safely. Do not wait until after drinking to make transportation decisions. Use a designated sober driver, rideshare, taxi, public transportation, or overnight stay.

Drivers should:

  • Avoid alcohol before driving
  • Follow posted speed limits
  • Put phones away
  • Avoid aggressive driving
  • Watch for pedestrians and cyclists
  • Rest before long drives
  • Wear a seat belt
  • Leave extra time for traffic

Parents should speak with teen drivers before the holiday weekend. Talk about seat belts, passengers, nighttime driving, speeding, and phone use. Hosts should offer nonalcoholic drinks, stop serving alcohol before guests leave, and never allow an impaired guest to drive. Passengers also have power. Speak up if a driver seems impaired, distracted, or reckless. Call for another ride. Take the keys if necessary.

Your decision may prevent a tragedy.

When Should You Contact a Florida Auto Accident Attorney?

You should contact an attorney after a Fourth of July crash if you suffered injuries, missed work, received medical bills, or believe another driver caused the collision.

Legal help can be especially important if:

  • The crash involved drunk driving
  • The other driver fled the scene
  • The insurance company blames you
  • Multiple vehicles were involved
  • A pedestrian, bicyclist, or motorcyclist suffered injuries
  • The at-fault driver lacked insurance
  • The at-fault driver did not have enough insurance
  • A commercial vehicle was involved
  • Someone died in the crash

An attorney can preserve evidence, identify insurance coverage, communicate with insurers, review medical records, and help protect your claim. You should also speak with an attorney before giving detailed statements to an insurance adjuster or accepting a quick settlement.

Injured in a Fourth of July Crash? Romano Law Group Can Help

A holiday crash can leave you with more questions than answers.

Who will pay for medical treatment? What happens if you cannot work? Should you speak to the insurance adjuster? What if the other driver was drunk, uninsured, underinsured, or driving someone else’s vehicle?

Romano Law Group’s experienced auto accident attorneys investigate fault, preserve evidence, communicate with insurance companies, and work to protect injured clients’ rights.

The firm handles auto accident cases involving drunk driving, distracted driving, hit-and-run crashes, rear-end collisions, side-impact crashes, multi-vehicle crashes, pedestrian injuries, bicycle accidents, motorcycle crashes, and other serious collisions.

Injured? Contact our family-owned personal injury law firm today. There is no fee until we win your case.

The post 4th of July brings increased danger on the road appeared first on Romano Law Group.

How to Navigate Conditional Payment Resolution

Medicare conditional payments are a persistent challenge for personal injury firms resolving cases for Medicare beneficiaries they represent. If a client is a Medicare beneficiary, you’re automatically dealing with the Medicare Secondary Payer Act (MSPA). The stakes are high. A misstep can expose lawyers and the firm to liability, government enforcement, and impact your client’s Medicare eligibility.  Here’s how to approach conditional payment resolution with clarity and control. 

Understand What Medicare Is Entitled To 

Medicare is a secondary payer. If a third party is responsible for medical costs, Medicare will pay conditionally, expecting reimbursement after settlement. CMS can recover from anyone who receives settlement funds, including lawyers and personal injury firms. It has the right to sue and collect double damages if a conditional payment is not properly addressed. 

Start Early with the BCRC 

Best practices are to begin the resolution process early, before resolution of the case. Contact the Benefits Coordination and Recovery Contractor (BCRC) to open a case and request a Conditional Payment Letter (CPL). This preliminary letter shows what Medicare has paid but isn’t a final demand. Still, it’s critical for auditing and identifying unrelated charges that shouldn’t be reimbursed. 

Don’t Rely on the CPL 

Once the case resolves, report the settlement to Medicare. Only then will Medicare issue a Final Demand. This is the amount you must pay, and it must be satisfied within 60 days. Fail to pay on time and you trigger interest above 10% and risk referral to the U.S. Treasury for collection. 

Know the Resolution Methods 

Medicare’s repayment formula under 42 C.F.R. § 411.37 provides limited relief for procurement costs but ignores liability facts, policy limits, and damages caps. If the math doesn’t work for your client, you have three options after paying the Final Demand: 

  1. Appeal – A four-stage internal process before reaching a federal judge. Slow, and interest accrues while you wait. 
  2. Compromise – Request a reduction based on equity, reviewed by CMS under the Federal Claims Collection Act. 
  3. Waiver – Apply for relief based on financial hardship or best interest of the program, via Sections 1870(c) or 1862(b) of the Social Security Act. 

Successful waivers or compromises result in refunds to the beneficiary or their lawyer. 

Avoid the Compliance Pitfalls 

Relying on a CPL instead of a Final Demand is a documented risk. One firm paid $250,000 to settle claims after using a CPL that underreported the amount owed. Others have faced enforcement for failing to repay Medicare or resolve conditional payments after referring cases to co-counsel. 

A pattern is clear: The government enforces Medicare’s reimbursement rights, regardless of firm size, intent, or delegation. 

Build a Compliant Process 

To stay protected: 

  • Identify Medicare beneficiaries early. 
  • Open files with the BCRC. 
  • Don’t disburse funds until receiving and paying the Final Demand. 
  • Audit CPLs for unrelated charges. 
  • Use compromise and waiver tools to maximize recovery for clients. 
  • Document all steps and client communications. 

Why This Matters to You 

Failure to address Medicare conditional payments can trigger malpractice claims, jeopardize settlements, and threaten eligibility for clients. More important, CMS’s enforcement actions show no tolerance for noncompliance. 

Your firm’s reputation and financial exposure are at stake. Don’t treat Medicare compliance as an afterthought. Treat it as a legal obligation and a strategic advantage. 

If you want to protect your clients and your practice, contact Synergy to explore how our Medicare resolution services support full MSPA compliance and help you close files with confidence. 

Schedule a Medicare Compliance Consult


Click here

$2 Million Settlement Reached Following Fatal Drowning of Child at Jacksonville Apartment Complex

Settlement Highlights Importance of Property Owners Eliminating Dangerous Water Hazards That Can Attract Children

The Haggard Law Firm’s Adam Finkel and Michael Haggard secured a $2 Million pre-suit, policy limit settlement in a fatal drowning case.

The settlement resolves a claim against Village Green at Baymeadows Property Owners Association, Inc. following the April 2025 drowning of Arnez Dowdell, who recently moved into the neighboring apartment complex with his mother and sisters.

While the Association did not admit liability, it agreed to pay its $2 Million insurance policy limits before a wrongful death lawsuit was filed.

Drowning After Family Moves into New Home

On April 8, 2025, only a short time after relocating to a new apartment, young Arnez Dowdell wandered to the neighboring apartment community, where he drowned in a stormwater management system.

The water feature was part of a stormwater management system owned and operated by Village Green at Baymeadows Property Owners Association, Inc.

The loss devastated Arnez’s family and prompted an extensive investigation into whether the property owner had taken reasonable steps to protect children from known water hazards.

Investigation Raised Questions About Property Maintenance and Safety

The Haggard Law Firm investigated the circumstances surrounding the drowning and examined the condition and maintenance of the stormwater management system.

The property contained a wooden board extending into the water, functioning as a ramp. Evidence suggested the board was intentionally placed to help turtles enter the water, and management either had long been aware of its presence and allowed it to remain, or placed it there themselves. The board created an unnecessary feature that attracted children toward the water, increasing the risk of drowning.

Finkel and Haggard believed these conditions created what Florida law refers to as an attractive nuisance—a dangerous condition that is likely to draw children who may not fully appreciate the risks involved.

Managing Partner Michael Haggard
Adam Finkel, partner

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attractive Nuisance and Property Owner Responsibility

Under Florida law, property owners have a duty to take reasonable steps to protect children from hazardous conditions that are likely to attract them.

While every case depends on its specific facts, water hazards can present significant dangers when they are not properly secured, maintained, or designed to discourage child access.

Features that unnecessarily encourage children to approach dangerous water areas may expose property owners to liability when foreseeable injuries occur.

$2 Million Policy Limits Settlement Reached Before Lawsuit Filed

Following its investigation, The Haggard Law Firm attorneys Michael Haggard and Adam Finkel prepared a wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of Arnez’s surviving parents.

Before filing suit, the firm presented evidence gathered during its investigation, along with information from law enforcement to the Association.

Although the Association denied negligence, it ultimately agreed to resolve the claim by paying its full $2 million insurance policy limits, avoiding litigation.

Apartment Complexes Must Prioritize Water Safety

Stormwater management systems, such as dry and wet retention ponds, and other water management systems are common features at apartment communities throughout Florida.

These areas can become especially dangerous for young children when:

  • Hazards are not properly maintained.
  • Attractive features encourage children to approach the water.
  • Safety measures are inadequate.
  • Dangerous conditions remain unaddressed despite notice.

Property owners and homeowners’ associations have an important responsibility to identify and correct foreseeable hazards that place children at risk.

The Haggard Law Firm’s Commitment to Water Safety

The Haggard Law Firm has represented families in drowning and wrongful death cases throughout Florida and across the country.

Managing Partner Michael Haggard serves on the Board of Directors of the National Drowning Prevention Alliance (NDPA) and has spent decades advocating for stronger water safety standards and accountability when preventable tragedies occur. Finkel serves as the chair of the nationwide drowning litigation group for the American Association of Justice.

While no legal outcome can replace the loss of a child, pursuing accountability can help encourage safer property management practices and prevent similar tragedies in the future.

Contact The Haggard Law Firm

If your family has suffered the loss of a loved one due to a drowning or another preventable incident involving negligent property maintenance, The Haggard Law Firm may be able to help.

Our attorneys investigate cases involving:

  • Apartment complex, hotel, short term vacation rental drownings
  • Retention and stormwater pond drownings
  • Negligent security
  • Wrongful death
  • Premises liability
  • And more

To learn more about your legal rights, contact The Haggard Law Firm for a confidential consultation. There is no financial obligation.

Lien, Subrogation, or Reimbursement: The Distinction Every Trial Lawyer Must Understand

Three legal mechanisms attach to personal injury recoveries and confusing them costs your client money and exposes your firm to malpractice risk. Here is how trial lawyers and paralegals should classify, defend, and resolve each one.

When a personal injury case settles, your client expects funds for rebuilding their life. Their expectation is likely that they should receive those funds immediately as they’ve already waited long enough. But before any distribution happens, third parties line up to assert claims against those proceeds. Healthcare providers want payment. Insurers want their money back. Government agencies demand reimbursement under federal statute. Each entity comes armed with separate legal authority, separate enforcement tools, and separate defenses your firm has available.

Treating these claims as interchangeable is a costly error. The legal mechanism behind each claim determines what your client owes, which reduction arguments apply, and where personal liability begins. The breakdown below covers the three categories trial lawyers encounter on every case: liens, subrogation rights, and reimbursement rights. Get the classification right, and you protect both your client’s net recovery and your bar license.

What a Lien Is

A lien is the strongest claim against a personal injury settlement. As a legal matter, the lien attaches directly to the settlement proceeds. Before your client sees a dollar, the lienholder holds a recognized right to demand payment from the fund. Liens arise three ways: by federal statute, by state statute, or through a court ruling.

Statutory liens are the heavyweights. The Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 1395y(b), creates an automatic right of recovery for conditional payments made on behalf of a Medicare beneficiary. State Medicaid programs operate under 42 U.S.C. Section 1396a(a)(25) and analogous state statutes. The Veterans Administration, TRICARE, and CHAMPVA assert recovery rights under the Federal Medical Care Recovery Act. These statutory claims attach by operation of law, not by contract.

Hospital and provider liens follow state law. Florida, Texas, California, and roughly two-thirds of jurisdictions authorize healthcare providers to have a lien against personal injury proceeds when treatment goes unpaid. These statutes can carry strict perfection requirements. A lien filed at the wrong courthouse, after the statutory deadline, or without proper notice to all parties is voidable. Your first verification step on any hospital lien is checking compliance with the applicable state statute. Counsel who skip the perfection analysis often pay liens with no obligation to pay.

Workers’ compensation carriers hold statutory liens in most jurisdictions when an injured employee pursues a third-party claim. Some states make these liens non-negotiable. Other states allow reductions under made-whole or equitable principles. Jurisdiction governs every aspect of the analysis.

Why Liens Carry the Most Leverage

The defining feature of a lien is direct attachment to the settlement fund. Ignore a valid lien, and personal liability follows. The Medicare cases prove this point repeatedly. In U.S. v. Harris (2009), a personal injury attorney settled a Medicare beneficiary’s case for $25,000 and failed to repay the $10,253.59 Medicare demanded. The Northern District of West Virginia granted summary judgment against the attorney personally, with the court holding the government has a right of action under 42 U.S.C. Section 1395y(b)(2)(B)(iii) against any entity receiving primary plan proceeds, attorneys included. Statutory authority for double damages remains available under the MSP.

The US v Carrigan & Anderson, PLLC case offers a more recent cautionary example. An attorney who tried to reduce a Medicare lien through Texas state court rather than the federal administrative appeals process faced a federal collection action and settled to avoid full personal liability. Two takeaways apply: the procedural channel matters as much as the substantive argument, and state court orders carry no force against a federal statutory recovery right.

How Subrogation Rights Operate Differently

Subrogation is a contractual or equitable doctrine, not a statutory lien. Under subrogation, an insurer who paid for injury-related treatment steps into the shoes of your client and pursues recovery against the tortfeasor or the at-fault party’s insurer. The legal effect matters. Subrogation does not attach to the settlement fund the way a lien does. The insurer’s claim runs against the third party, not directly against your client’s recovery. Subrogation is not usually honored by the third party when an attorney is involved, and the third party tells the lienholder they need to deal with the attorney. Essentially turning it into a reimbursement scheme.

State law shapes the enforceability of subrogation rights. Three doctrines limit insurer recovery in jurisdictions where each doctrine applies. The made-whole doctrine bars an insurer from recovering until the injured party has been fully compensated for all losses. If your client’s settlement falls short of total damages, the insurer’s claim is reduced or eliminated. Many states recognize the made-whole doctrine as a default rule, with carriers required to disclaim the doctrine explicitly in policy language.

The common fund doctrine requires insurers to bear a proportionate share of attorney fees and costs incurred in producing the recovery. The rationale is straightforward. The insurer benefits from your work, so the insurer pays for the work. Anti-subrogation statutes in some states prohibit certain health insurers from asserting recovery against personal injury proceeds entirely or cap the recoverable amount.

The major exception swallows much of the rule for ERISA-governed self-funded plans that operate under federal preemption. State-law defenses like the made-whole doctrine do not apply to these plans. ERISA self-funded subrogation rights remain among the most aggressive in the field, particularly after the Supreme Court’s holdings in US Airways v. McCutchen, 569 U.S. 88 (2013). The plan language controls.

For non-ERISA plans, including individual policies and fully insured employer plans, state law continues to apply. Determining the funding status of an employer plan is your first move. Request the Summary Plan Description and the full plan document directly from the Plan Administrator, then identify whether the plan is self-funded (typically ERISA-governed) or fully insured (typically subject to state law).

Reimbursement Rights, A Different Animal

Reimbursement rights sit close to subrogation but operate through a different mechanism. Where subrogation lets the insurer pursue the tortfeasor directly, a reimbursement clause requires your client to repay the insurer from the client’s own settlement funds. The obligation runs directly against your client, not against the at-fault party.

This distinction is more than academic. A reimbursement claim survives even when subrogation principles would defeat the insurer’s recovery against the tortfeasor. The clause is contractual, and contractual remedies apply. But this also means that it must be stated in the contract.

ERISA plans favor reimbursement clauses for exactly this reason Many plans demand repayment from settlement proceeds without attorney fee reduction, made-whole protection, or comparative fault, depending entirely on the language of the plan document. After McCutchen, the Supreme Court made clear plan language controls. If the plan contains specific reimbursement provisions with abrogation of equitable defenses, courts enforce the terms as written. However, and most importantly, if the plan is silent or ambiguous, equitable defenses remain available.

The same reimbursement structure appears in private health insurance policies. The analysis is identical regardless of payer. Read the controlling document, identify the reimbursement language, apply available defenses via state law.

The Practical Difference for Your Case File

Classification drives strategy. A statutory lien from Medicare requires you to follow specific administrative procedures: obtain the conditional payment letter from the Benefits Coordination Recovery Center (BCRC), notify the BCRC of settlement, wait for the Final Demand, then pay or pursue compromise or waiver through proper channels. Substituting state court adjudication for the federal process is not an option and exposes your firm to direct collection action, as Carrigan learned.

A subrogation claim under a fully insured state regulated plan opens the door to state law defenses. Asserting the made-whole doctrine, applying the common fund offset, and invoking applicable anti-subrogation statutes are all proper moves. The same claim under a self-funded ERISA plan, and those defenses may disappear. You are reading plan language and arguing about contractual terms.

A reimbursement claim requires the same plan document analysis. The insurer’s leverage comes from the contract, so your defense begins with the contract.

Where Counsel Get into Trouble

Three categories of error account for most of the personal liability exposure in lien resolution.

First, treating an ERISA self-funded plan’s reimbursement claim as if state law applied. An attorney who reduces the plan’s recovery by the common fund offset, then disburses funds to the client, could face a conversion claim under 29 U.S.C. Section 1132 if the plan terms did not allow the offset. Read the plan first.

Second, missing a Medicare Advantage lien as they operate under the same MSP statute as traditional Medicare and also have a private cause of action for double damages. The 11th Circuit confirmed this in Humana v. Western Heritage Insurance Co. Searching only for traditional Medicare conditional payments leaves your firm exposed. Every case requires inquiry into whether a Medicare Advantage plan also paid claims at some point during the treatment period.

Third, failing to verify hospital lien perfection. Hospitals routinely send lien notices with inflated charge amounts and procedural defects. Paying these claims without checking perfection requirements is, plainly, leaving client money on the table. State statutes set specific timing, filing location, and notice requirements. A defective lien is voidable, and your law firm has no obligation to pay a voidable lien.

What to Do Differently Starting Now

Build classification into your intake process. Every case file should track, for each potential claimant, the legal basis for the claim (statute, contract, or both), the funding status of any insurer (ERISA self-funded or state regulated fully insured), and the procedural requirements for perfection or recovery. Without these data points, your negotiating position is weaker than the facts warrant.

When negotiating, lead with the legal classification. A reduction request grounded in statutory authority or controlling plan language carries weight. A general appeal to fairness does not. Lienholders and their recovery vendors process thousands of claims annually under standardized procedures. Counsel who presents specific legal arguments get different responses than counsel who requests reductions without legal grounding.

Document everything in writing. A verbal agreement with a recovery vendor is a future dispute. Confirm reduction agreements in writing within 24 hours, obtain formal lien satisfactions before disbursement, and hold settlement funds in trust until written releases arrive.

Where Synergy Fits

Lien resolution is a distinct competency. The legal analysis spans federal statutes, state law, ERISA preemption, contract interpretation, and procedural processes and requirements imposed by hundreds of different recovery vendors. Building this expertise in-house works for some firms. For others, the case volume and complexity argue for partnership with a dedicated resolution firm.

Synergy resolves liens across all 50 states and every major payer category: Medicare, Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, ERISA, FEHBA, military and VA, hospital and provider liens. Our team holds the legal analysis, vendor relationships, and process discipline required to maximize client net recovery while protecting your firm and attorneys from liability exposure. Learn more about how a partnership works at www.PartnerWithSynergy.com.

Written by: Teresa Kenyon | Vice President of Lien Resolution at Synergy

Ralph Pillinger: The View from a Production Lead’s Seat in a Multi-State Personal Injury Practice

A 24-year litigation paralegal who also coaches endurance athletes explains how the best personal injury firms run operations, set up cases, and use AI without losing the human part of the work.

I

On the latest episode of the Trial Lawyer View by Synergy podcast, I sat down with Ralph Pillinger, a litigation paralegal and production lead at Feller & Wendt, LLC, a multi-state catastrophic injury firm. Pillinger has spent more than two decades in litigation. He has also led national sales training, worked in financial services, and still coaches endurance athletes on the side. That mix shows up in how he thinks about personal injury law firm operations.

Start with the end in mind, then build the playbook

Pillinger frames almost everything around control. In litigation, you cannot control the weather, the other side, or what a jury does. So, he focuses the team on the one thing they control: the process.

“You need to make sure you have a playbook and you run it no matter what”.

This matters more as you grow. Feller & Wendt went from under 50 employees to over 105 in about a year. That kind of growth breaks firms that run on memory and personality. It rewards firms that run on documented, repeatable processes.

Why a firm at scale needs a production lead

Most personal injury firms have no production lead. Pillinger argues that is a mistake once you cross a certain size threshold. His job is to make sure every team operates at the same level, not only the strongest one.

The role started with a simple observation from his director of operations: not all teams were producing the same way. Pillinger already coached athletes. The firm asked him to coach case teams the same way. His day-to-day work centers on three things:

•      Hiring for culture fit first, then matching the profile to the position using tools like predictive index or DISC.

•      Putting the right person in the right chair, so the firm uses each person’s strengths instead of fighting their weaknesses.

•      Building infrastructure around stated core values, so the team knows what good work looks like at every handoff.

If your firm has more than 50 people and no one owns consistency across teams, you have found a gap worth filling.

The handoff problem most PI firm owners never see

What operational breakdown do paralegals see clearly that PI law firm owners miss? His answer was the gap between the people who interact with the client every day and the people who litigate the case.

Often the litigator comes in at the back end. The intake specialist or case manager had the early contact. When those two don’t properly connect, the firm loses information that drives case value and client trust. The fix is not complicated. The best teams debrief each other and ask what they would do next.

Stop paying your team to do work outside their wheelhouse

Pillinger is direct about lien resolution. He is good at getting reductions. He does not enjoy it, and it takes him (or his team) times longer than a specialist. So, he hands it off and spends that time on high value legal work that moves the needle on case value.

Any task inside a firm that is repeatable and administrative, not high-level legal work, belongs with technology or an outside partner. Lien work, medical record retrieval, and similar functions pull your team away from client contact and case value. Both of those drive better outcomes and better reviews. The team should focus on “what they do best, which is securing justice for people that are injured.”

Coach your team the way you would coach an athlete

This is where Pillinger’s background pays off. He coaches case teams with the same model he uses to take someone from the couch to a 50K trail race. Two questions decide whether someone succeeds:

•      Do you believe the coach knows what they are talking about?

•      Will you follow the plan even on the bad days, knowing that 160 training days are never all perfect?

Then he adds a third step that most managers skip. He asks how each person wants to be coached. Some want a swift kick. Some want an arm around the shoulder. Some need a soft sell. He asks permission to coach them that way, then holds them to it. Pacing a team that carries complex caseloads works the same as balancing training load with recovery.

AI does 92 percent. The art is the last 8.

Pillinger is a self-taught technology adopter who leans on tech-savvy friends to stay current. His view on AI is grounded, not hyped. He cited a number worth repeating: human review of a 2,000-page document runs about 65 percent efficacy. Depending on the model, AI lands between 85 and 95 percent. He would rather spend his time on the remaining gap than on the bulk of the pages.

AI does 92 percent. The art is the last 8 percent.

He credits trial lawyer Mark Lanier with the framing he repeats often: AI will not replace attorneys and paralegals, but attorneys and paralegals who use AI will replace those who do not. The same is true in almost any industry.

His advice on tools is equally practical. Do not chase the 2,000 products that launch every year. Pick one, learn it deeply, and get firm-wide buy-in. He also warned about how firms buy poolry:

•      They over-invest in products the team never tested and never asked for, so no one uses them.

•      They under-invest in high-value tools like AI medical chronology, often out of distrust.

His fix: run a pilot, let multiple teams test the options, score them on a shared rubric, and let the people who will use the tool help pick it. That is how you get a real return on the spend.

If one resignation creates chaos, you built a job, not a business

If you are one resignation away from chaos, do you really have a business? You probably created a job for yourself.

The cure is redundancy. Hire people better than you. Delegate real responsibility. Move people into the chairs where they win, then backfill behind them. Pillinger is open about his own goal: he wants to duplicate himself with a production lead in every location so the firm runs without him. He even ran an AI prompt asking what he needed to work on that he did not see in himself. The answer was hard to hear. He chased it anyway.

His closing rule on this is one every leader should sit with: “If you are the smartest person in the room, you are in the wrong room.” Build an inner circle that challenges you. Avoid the yes-people.

What to do with this

If you lead or operate a personal injury firm, here is where to start:

Find your handoff gaps. Make sure attorneys debrief the people who had first contact with the client.

Move repeatable admin work off your team. Lien resolution and record retrieval are client costs, not partner time.

Pick one AI tool and go deep. Run a pilot, get buy-in, and let AI carry the repeatable 92 percent.

Build redundancy into your firm now. Train and delegate so no single departure breaks the operation.

🎧 Listen to the full podcast conversation here:

🔗 Want more insights like this?

If you’re a personal injury lawyer ready to scale, streamline, and step into your role as CEO, let’s talk. Join the Peak Practice Community, and learn how synergy. can help you eliminate settlement bottlenecks, resolve complex liens, and maximize recoveries.  Learn more here: https://partnerwithsynergy.com/peak-practice/

If you want to grow and scale your law firm more effectively, consider partnering with Synergy for lien resolution.  Learn more at: https://partnerwithsynergy.com/liens/

Ralph Pillinger: The View from a Production Lead’s Seat in a Multi-State Personal Injury Practice

A 24-year litigation paralegal who also coaches endurance athletes explains how the best personal injury firms run operations, set up cases, and use AI without losing the human part of the work.

On the latest episode of the Trial Lawyer View by Synergy podcast, I sat down with Ralph Pillinger, a litigation paralegal and production lead at Feller & Wendt, LLC, a multi-state catastrophic injury firm. Pillinger has spent more than two decades in litigation. He has also led national sales training, worked in financial services, and still coaches endurance athletes on the side. That mix shows up in how he thinks about personal injury law firm operations.

Start with the end in mind, then build the playbook

Pillinger frames almost everything around control. In litigation, you cannot control the weather, the other side, or what a jury does. So, he focuses the team on the one thing they control: the process.

“You need to make sure you have a playbook and you run it no matter what”.

This matters more as you grow. Feller & Wendt went from under 50 employees to over 105 in about a year. That kind of growth breaks firms that run on memory and personality. It rewards firms that run on documented, repeatable processes.

Why a firm at scale needs a production lead

Most personal injury firms have no production lead. Pillinger argues that is a mistake once you cross a certain size threshold. His job is to make sure every team operates at the same level, not only the strongest one.

The role started with a simple observation from his director of operations: not all teams were producing the same way. Pillinger already coached athletes. The firm asked him to coach case teams the same way. His day-to-day work centers on three things:

•      Hiring for culture fit first, then matching the profile to the position using tools like predictive index or DISC.

•      Putting the right person in the right chair, so the firm uses each person’s strengths instead of fighting their weaknesses.

•      Building infrastructure around stated core values, so the team knows what good work looks like at every handoff.

If your firm has more than 50 people and no one owns consistency across teams, you have found a gap worth filling.

The handoff problem most PI firm owners never see

What operational breakdown do paralegals see clearly that PI law firm owners miss? His answer was the gap between the people who interact with the client every day and the people who litigate the case.

Often the litigator comes in at the back end. The intake specialist or case manager had the early contact. When those two don’t properly connect, the firm loses information that drives case value and client trust. The fix is not complicated. The best teams debrief each other and ask what they would do next.

Stop paying your team to do work outside their wheelhouse

Pillinger is direct about lien resolution. He is good at getting reductions. He does not enjoy it, and it takes him (or his team) times longer than a specialist. So, he hands it off and spends that time on high value legal work that moves the needle on case value.

Any task inside a firm that is repeatable and administrative, not high-level legal work, belongs with technology or an outside partner. Lien work, medical record retrieval, and similar functions pull your team away from client contact and case value. Both of those drive better outcomes and better reviews. The team should focus on “what they do best, which is securing justice for people that are injured.”

Coach your team the way you would coach an athlete

This is where Pillinger’s background pays off. He coaches case teams with the same model he uses to take someone from the couch to a 50K trail race. Two questions decide whether someone succeeds:

•      Do you believe the coach knows what they are talking about?

•      Will you follow the plan even on the bad days, knowing that 160 training days are never all perfect?

Then he adds a third step that most managers skip. He asks how each person wants to be coached. Some want a swift kick. Some want an arm around the shoulder. Some need a soft sell. He asks permission to coach them that way, then holds them to it. Pacing a team that carries complex caseloads works the same as balancing training load with recovery.

AI does 92 percent. The art is the last 8.

Pillinger is a self-taught technology adopter who leans on tech-savvy friends to stay current. His view on AI is grounded, not hyped. He cited a number worth repeating: human review of a 2,000-page document runs about 65 percent efficacy. Depending on the model, AI lands between 85 and 95 percent. He would rather spend his time on the remaining gap than on the bulk of the pages.

AI does 92 percent. The art is the last 8 percent.

He credits trial lawyer Mark Lanier with the framing he repeats often: AI will not replace attorneys and paralegals, but attorneys and paralegals who use AI will replace those who do not. The same is true in almost any industry.

His advice on tools is equally practical. Do not chase the 2,000 products that launch every year. Pick one, learn it deeply, and get firm-wide buy-in. He also warned about how firms buy poolry:

•      They over-invest in products the team never tested and never asked for, so no one uses them.

•      They under-invest in high-value tools like AI medical chronology, often out of distrust.

His fix: run a pilot, let multiple teams test the options, score them on a shared rubric, and let the people who will use the tool help pick it. That is how you get a real return on the spend.

If one resignation creates chaos, you built a job, not a business

If you are one resignation away from chaos, do you really have a business? You probably created a job for yourself.

The cure is redundancy. Hire people better than you. Delegate real responsibility. Move people into the chairs where they win, then backfill behind them. Pillinger is open about his own goal: he wants to duplicate himself with a production lead in every location so the firm runs without him. He even ran an AI prompt asking what he needed to work on that he did not see in himself. The answer was hard to hear. He chased it anyway.

His closing rule on this is one every leader should sit with: “If you are the smartest person in the room, you are in the wrong room.” Build an inner circle that challenges you. Avoid the yes-people.

What to do with this

If you lead or operate a personal injury firm, here is where to start:

Find your handoff gaps. Make sure attorneys debrief the people who had first contact with the client.

Move repeatable admin work off your team. Lien resolution and record retrieval are client costs, not partner time.

Pick one AI tool and go deep. Run a pilot, get buy-in, and let AI carry the repeatable 92 percent.

Build redundancy into your firm now. Train and delegate so no single departure breaks the operation.

🎧 Listen to the full podcast conversation on Trial Lawyer View here: https://triallawyerview.com/podcast/ralph-pillinger/

🔗 Want more insights like this?

If you’re a personal injury lawyer ready to scale, streamline, and step into your role as CEO, let’s talk. Join the Peak Practice Community, and learn how Synergy can help you eliminate settlement bottlenecks, resolve complex liens, and maximize recoveries.  Learn more here: https://partnerwithsynergy.com/peak-practice/

If you want to grow and scale your law firm more effectively, consider partnering with Synergy for lien resolution.  Learn more at: https://partnerwithsynergy.com/liens/

Taller Trucks, SUVs and Pedestrian Accidents

Across the country, safety researchers, regulators, and injury advocates are paying closer attention to a troubling roadway trend: larger pickups, SUVs, vans, and crossovers may be making pedestrian crashes more dangerous.

A recent New York Times investigation drew renewed attention to the relationship between vehicle design and pedestrian deaths, especially the growth of taller hoods, larger front ends, and expanded blind zones. Accessible reporting on that investigation states that increased hood height has contributed to thousands of avoidable pedestrian deaths in the United States between 2016 and 2024.

For families in West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, and throughout Florida, this is more than a national policy discussion. Pedestrians are among the most vulnerable people on the road. When someone walking is hit by a vehicle, there is no seat belt, airbag, or protective frame to absorb the impact. The consequences can include traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, broken bones, internal injuries, permanent disability, or wrongful death.

At Romano Law Group, we have seen how quickly a normal walk, a trip through a parking lot, or a crosswalk crossing can become life-changing. As a family-owned personal injury law firm based in West Palm Beach, we help injured people and families understand their rights after serious crashes involving cars, trucks, SUVs, commercial vehicles, and other dangerous roadway conditions.

Why Vehicle Size and Shape Matter in Pedestrian Crashes

A pedestrian crash is not only about speed or driver behavior. The design of the vehicle can also affect whether a pedestrian survives.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has recognized this issue in a proposed pedestrian head-protection standard for new passenger vehicles. NHTSA stated that the proposed rule would apply to passenger vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 10,000 pounds or less, including trucks, SUVs, crossovers, and vans. NHTSA also reported that in 2022, pedestrian fatalities involving the front of a vehicle were most common for multipurpose passenger vehicles, followed by passenger cars.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety has also studied this issue. IIHS research has found that vehicles with tall, more vertical front ends pose a greater danger to pedestrians. One key concern is that a higher front end can strike a pedestrian higher on the body, increasing the risk of severe trauma to the head, neck, chest, and torso.

The reason is straightforward. A smaller, lower vehicle may strike a pedestrian lower on the body, sometimes causing the person to roll onto the hood. A taller, blunter vehicle can strike higher on the body and knock a person forward or down, which may increase the chance of catastrophic injury.

For injured pedestrians and grieving families, these details matter. They may help explain how the crash happened, why the injuries were so severe, and what evidence should be reviewed.

Blind Zones and Turning Crashes Are Another Major Concern

Large vehicles can also create visibility problems. High hoods, wide pillars, large mirrors, and oversized front ends may make it harder for drivers to see pedestrians, especially children, older adults, wheelchair users, cyclists, and people crossing close to the vehicle.

This matters in everyday Florida driving. Many pedestrian crashes occur in places where people should be expected: crosswalks, intersections, school zones, parking lots, driveways, and shopping centers.

  • A driver turning left or right may be focused on oncoming traffic and fail to notice a person already in the crosswalk.
  • A driver pulling forward from a stop may not see someone directly in front of a tall hood.
  • A driver backing or maneuvering in a parking lot may miss a child or older adult nearby.

Pedestrian safety requires drivers to slow down, scan carefully, yield when required, avoid distractions, and understand the limitations of their own vehicle. A larger vehicle is not an excuse for failing to see what should have been seen.

Pedestrian Deaths Remain a Serious National Problem

Although pedestrian safety has become a more visible public issue, the numbers remain deeply concerning. NHTSA reported that pedestrian deaths increased 57% from 2013 to 2022, rising from 4,779 to 7,522. Federal regulators have said proposed pedestrian-protection rules could save lives each year by reducing the risk of serious or fatal head injuries.

For Florida communities, the risk is especially visible because of our mix of high-traffic corridors, tourism, aging pedestrians, busy parking lots, school zones, and roads that were often designed primarily for vehicle speed rather than pedestrian safety. West Palm Beach and surrounding areas continue to grow, and with growth comes more interaction between drivers, pedestrians, cyclists, delivery vehicles, rideshare vehicles, commercial trucks, and large SUVs.

When drivers are distracted, speeding, impaired, aggressive, or simply not paying attention, pedestrians are often the ones who suffer the most serious consequences.

Who May Be Liable After a Pedestrian Crash?

Every pedestrian crash requires a careful investigation. Liability depends on the facts, and no one should assume fault before evidence is reviewed. However, potentially responsible parties may include:

  • A negligent driver who was speeding, distracted, impaired, fatigued, failed to yield, ignored traffic signals, made an unsafe turn, or failed to keep a proper lookout.
  • A commercial vehicle operator or employer, if the vehicle was being used for work and the driver was acting within the scope of employment.
  • A property owner or business, in some parking lot or premises-related incidents, if unsafe design, poor lighting, missing signage, or dangerous traffic flow contributed to the crash.
  • A vehicle manufacturer or parts manufacturer, in limited cases where a defective vehicle system or unsafe design may have contributed to the injury.
  • A government entity or contractor, in certain roadway-design or maintenance cases, though these claims can involve special notice requirements and deadlines.

When we investigate a pedestrian accident, our goal is to identify what happened, preserve evidence, and determine who may be legally responsible. That may include documenting the crash scene, reviewing police reports, locating surveillance video, speaking with witnesses, evaluating medical records, examining vehicle damage, and working with experts when needed.

This type of investigation is especially important in pedestrian cases because the injured person may not remember the crash, may have been transported immediately for emergency care, or may be unable to gather evidence at the scene.

Evidence That Can Matter in a Pedestrian Accident Case

After a serious pedestrian crash, important evidence can disappear quickly. Skid marks fade. Vehicles are repaired. Surveillance footage is overwritten. Witnesses become harder to locate. A prompt legal investigation may help preserve:

  • Police crash reports
  • 911 records and body camera footage
  • Traffic camera or surveillance video
  • Vehicle damage photographs
  • Event data recorder information
  • Cell phone records, when legally obtainable
  • Driver employment or delivery records
  • Maintenance records for commercial vehicles
  • Scene measurements and visibility analysis
  • Medical records and expert evaluations
  • Witness statements
  • Roadway design, lighting, and signage evidence

When a truck or commercial vehicle is involved, the case can become more complex. Our trucking accident attorneys understand that evidence such as driver logs, maintenance records, black box data, and company safety practices may all become important in determining what happened and who may be responsible.

What Injured Pedestrians and Families Should Do After a Crash

After a pedestrian crash, medical care comes first. Even injuries that seem manageable can worsen over time. Head injuries, internal bleeding, spine injuries, and soft-tissue damage may not be fully obvious at the scene.

We encourage injured pedestrians and families to:

  • Get medical attention immediately and follow all treatment recommendations.
  • Report the crash to law enforcement and request the crash report when available.
  • Save photos, videos, clothing, shoes, damaged belongings, and any written communications.
  • Avoid giving recorded statements to an insurance company before speaking with an attorney.
  • Write down everything remembered about the crash, including location, weather, lighting, traffic signals, driver statements, and witnesses.
  • Contact a personal injury lawyer as soon as possible so evidence can be preserved.

Our role is to deal with the insurance companies, investigate the crash, and pursue accountability so our clients can focus on healing.

Prevention: What Drivers Can Do Right Now

While regulators and automakers debate vehicle-design changes, drivers can take immediate steps to reduce risk.

  • Slow down in neighborhoods, parking lots, school zones, and near crosswalks.
  • Look left, right, and left again before turning.
  • Check carefully around vehicle blind zones, including A-pillars and the area directly in front of the hood.
  • Never text or handle a phone while driving.
  • Treat every crosswalk as a place where someone may be present.
  • Be extra cautious around children, older adults, people using mobility devices, and cyclists.
  • Avoid assuming that advanced vehicle safety systems will always detect pedestrians.
  • Use extra care at night, in rain, and in high-glare conditions.

Large-vehicle drivers should be especially aware that sitting higher does not always mean seeing better. A tall hood may hide a pedestrian directly in front of the vehicle, and a wider front end can make turns more dangerous when a driver fails to scan slowly and deliberately.

Prevention: What Pedestrians Can Do to Reduce Risk

  • Pedestrians should not be blamed for unsafe vehicle design or negligent driving. Still, practical steps can reduce risk.
  • Use marked crosswalks whenever available.
  • Make eye contact with drivers before crossing when possible.
  • Avoid walking behind or directly in front of large vehicles that may be about to move.
  • Use lights, reflective clothing, or bright colors at night.
  • Be cautious around driveways, parking lots, and right-turn lanes.
  • Do not assume a driver sees you because you can see the vehicle.
  • Keep children close in parking lots and near intersections.
  • These steps cannot prevent every crash, but they can improve visibility and reaction time.

When a Pedestrian Crash Becomes a Legal Claim

A pedestrian accident claim may seek compensation for medical expenses, future medical care, lost income, reduced earning capacity, pain and suffering, disability, scarring, loss of enjoyment of life, and other damages available under Florida law. In fatal pedestrian crashes, surviving family members may have a wrongful death claim.

Every case is different. The value and legal strategy depend on the facts, insurance coverage, injuries, liability evidence, comparative fault issues, and the long-term impact on the injured person’s life.

At Romano Law Group, we are proud to be a family-owned personal injury law firm serving West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, clients throughout Florida, and clients nationwide. Our team has experience handling pedestrian accidents among the personal injury matters we handle, and our team can help injured people understand their options after a serious crash.

Injured in a Pedestrian Crash? Contact Our Family-Owned Personal Injury Law Firm Today.

A serious pedestrian crash can leave families facing emergency care, surgery, rehabilitation, missed work, insurance pressure, and painful uncertainty. You do not have to handle that process alone.

If you or someone you love was hit by a car, truck, SUV, or commercial vehicle, contact Romano Law Group today for a free consultation.

Injured? Contact our family-owned personal injury law firm today. There is no fee until we win your case. Call 561-533-6700.

The post Taller Trucks, SUVs and Pedestrian Accidents appeared first on Romano Law Group.

The Pro-Rata Method. How Medicaid Liens Actually Get Reduced.

A practical walk through the pro-rata formula that decides how much of a Medicaid lien you can cut. 

Why does a state Medicaid agency so often demand the full amount it paid, even when the injury victim recovered only a fraction of what the case was worth? To the agency, the demand feels obvious. Medicaid spent the money, so Medicaid wants it back. Federal law mandates a different result. A Medicaid lien is limited from the start, and when a case settles for less than full value, the recoverable lien shrinks with it. That reduction has a name. We call it the pro-rata method, and it traces directly to the Supreme Court’s 2006 decision in Arkansas Department of Health and Human Services v. Ahlborn

Understanding how the method works, and what it now takes to apply it, is the difference between paying a Medicaid lien at face value and protecting a large share of an injury victim’s net recovery. This blog walks through the federal limit that makes reduction possible, the formula itself, the allocation rule that makes it stick, and the valuation work the Court’s more recent rulings now require. 

The federal limit that makes reduction possible 

Every state that takes part in Medicaid must have a third-party liability law. Federal statute requires it, at 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(25), and the state is treated as having acquired the injury victim’s right to recover medical payments from a liable third party. That is the recovery side of the ledger, and it is the reason a Medicaid lien exists at all. 

The limits of the lien sits on the other side of the same statutory scheme. The federal anti-lien provision at 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(a)(1) bars any lien against a person’s property, before death, on account of medical assistance paid. A personal injury settlement is the injury victim’s property. Medicaid gets a narrow exception to the anti-lien rule, but that exception reaches only the part of the settlement that represents payment for medical care. Everything else stays with the injury victim. The pain and suffering, the lost earnings, the loss of future earning capacity, all of it sits outside the state’s reach of reimbursement for a Medicaid lien. 

So, the state cannot dip into the whole settlement. It can reach the medical damages and nothing more. That single boundary is what every reduction argument is built on. If you treate a Medicaid demand as fixed, you skipped the first question the statute raises, which is how much of this particular recovery is even reachable. 

The Ahlborn formula in plain numbers 

Heidi Ahlborn was nineteen when a car crash left her with a catastrophic brain injury. Arkansas Medicaid paid $215,645 for her care. Her personal injury case was later valued, by stipulation between the parties, at roughly $3 million. She settled for about one-sixth of that full value. 

Arkansas wanted its entire $215,645 back, out of a settlement many times smaller than the case was worth. The Supreme Court held it could not have it. Because the injury victim recovered only one-sixth of her full damages, the state could recover only one-sixth of its claim, which came to about $35,581. The logic is equitable rather than mechanical. If the injury victim did not collect full value, the state should not collect its full claim either. Both sides absorb the same discount. 

The California Supreme Court later restated the math in a form that is easy to apply at your desk, in theory. Work out what percentage the settlement represents of the total claim value. Then apply that same percentage to the amount Medicaid actually paid. The product is the potential reduced lien amount, subject to the state bearing its proportionate share of litigation costs. A case worth $1 million that settles for $250,000 has captured 25 percent of full value, so a $100,000 Medicaid claim falls to roughly $25,000. The numbers change from case to case. The ratio does the work. 

Locking the allocation under Wos 

A formula only helps if the state has to accept the allocation behind it. That is where Wos v. E.M.A. comes in. North Carolina had a statute that simply declared one-third of every settlement to be Medicaid’s share, with no procedure for the injury victim to argue for anything different. In 2013 the Supreme Court struck that approach down. A state cannot fix the medical portion of a recovery by arbitrary percentage. As the Court framed it, an irrebuttable, one-size-fits-all statutory presumption is incompatible with the Medicaid Act’s clear mandate. If a state could simply designate one-third as medical, the Court reasoned, nothing would stop it from designating half, or three-quarters, or the entire recovery. 

Wos did more than knock down an incompatible statute. It confirmed the tool that makes the pro-rata method hold up. When there has been a judicial finding or approval of an allocation between medical and non-medical damages, whether through a jury verdict, a court order, or a stipulation binding on all parties, that allocation controls and the state is bound by it. The practical instruction follows directly. Where the stakes justify it, get the allocation on the record. 

After Gallardo, valuation decides the reduction 

For years, Ahlborn was read to limit state recovery to past medical expenses. Gallardo v. Marstiller, decided in 2022, changed that. The Court held that a state may recover from the portion of a settlement that represents payment for medical care, past and future. Future medical damages are now within the state’s reach, if and only if, the statue’s statute allows it. 

Two things did not change, and both matter. The anti-lien statute still protects the non-medical portion of the recovery, so pain and suffering and lost wages remain off limits to the state. And a Medicaid beneficiary’s future eligibility is still protected through a special needs trust, which Gallardo did not touch. What the decision shifted is the size of the pool the pro-rata percentage applies to in certain states. After Gallardo, the reduction percentage is applied to the entire medical claim, past plus future, rather than past medical bills alone assuming your state’s statue allows it. 

That makes valuation the heart of the matter. In a catastrophic case with a large life care plan, the future medical figure can be so large that a pro-rata reduction barely reduces the lien. The counterweight is the value assigned to non-economic damages. The larger and better supported the pain and suffering figure, the smaller the medical share of the total recovery, and the deeper the reduction the trial lawyer can argue for.  

Where Synergy fits 

State third-party liability statutes vary widely, and recovery contractors such as Optum and Conduent rarely volunteer a reduction. Applying AhlbornWos, and Gallardo to a specific state statute, and then doing the valuation work that supports a real reduction, is detailed and time-consuming. It is also where a strong net recovery is protected or lost. Synergy is the industry leader in healthcare lien resolution for personal injury firms. The Synergy team includes attorneys and lien specialists who reduce Medicaid liens across all fifty states. 

If a Medicaid lien is still in motion and the demand ignores the discount the injury victim actually took, send it over.  

Download our pro-rata reduction white paper below. 

Download our Pro-Rata Reduction White Paper

Send us Your Toughest Open Medicaid Lien for a Free Consult


Click here

What Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring Can Reveal During Labor

For many parents, going into labor is a day filled with excitement and uncertainty. During labor and delivery, medical conditions and circumstances can change quickly, and the terminology used by medical professionals may be confusing or difficult for families to understand. One of the most important tools used during labor is fetal heart rate monitoring. When interpreted correctly…

Source