Singleton Schreiber
Singleton Schreiber's playbook is reframing regulatory noncompliance as deliberate concealment—turning a missing or deficient SDS into a jury narrative about a company that hid known dangers, as evidenced in Estate of Khan v. Pacific Foods (CA, 2026), a multi-plaintiff respiratory case that returned a $31,600,000 verdict. The firm currently has its ad spend and litigation activity directed at 15 businesses in the demo book, with 4 open lawsuits among them. Beyond the Khan verdict, public-record outcomes tied to this firm are limited; the exposure here is the concealment theory, not the documented track record.
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