Millennial Jurors May Change the Face of Product Liability Trials
Millennial Jurors May Change the Face of Product Liability Trials
Say what you will about them, but Millennials are now serving jury duty and that, my friends, means change is coming. At the 2016 Emerging Issues in Motor Vehicle Product Liability Litigation conference, sponsored by the American Bar Association in April, a panel on Millennial jurors shocked many of the attending attorneys. While no one can agree on Millennial birth dates, experts say the range is anywhere from 1980 (or the early 80s) through the mid-90s or the year 2000. In any case, this safety-conscious generation has strong views on everything from motor vehicle and other product liability issues to methods of trial presentation. In short, Millennial jurors may change the face of product liability trials.One attendee, attorney Todd Tracy, said to fellow panelists, “The Millennial discussion has us shocked up here.”So, just what is so shocking?Millennials tend to have a poor opinion of corporations, for one thing. Marygrace Schaeffer, senior vice president of Minneapolis-based trial consultant firm DecisionQuest, revealed some data from a recent survey. The data caused some in the audience, which included several defense attorneys, to audibly gasp.Some of Ms. Schaeffer’s findings included:
71% of Millennials surveyed agree that most Big Business puts profits before people and safety;
84% felt that Big Business needs to take every safety precaution “no matter how impractical or costly” and 63% of those strongly agreed with that statement;
Millennials don’t believe government safety standards are the appropriate metric against which safety should be measured;
In fact, 88% of the Millennials surveyed agreed that “companies should be held to a higher safety standard than what government regulations require.”
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Millennial Jurors Will Affect Product Liability Trials
About Jay W. Belle Isle
Before becoming LegalReader's Editor-in-Chief, Jay W. Belle Isle worked as a freelance copywriter with clients on four continents. Jay has a degree in Business Administration from Cleary University and a Juris Doctor from Thomas M. Cooley Law School. Jay has also worked as a contracts administrator for a DOD contractor specializing in vehicle armor.