What Will You Learn
Aviation disputes span a wide spectrum of legal complexity, from individual passenger injury claims governed by international treaty to mass disaster litigation involving manufacturer defects and multidistrict coordination. This program breaks down what those challenges mean for real client representation on both sides. You will learn to classify claims under the Montreal Convention and domestic frameworks, preserve and develop evidence from day one, navigate MDL dynamics in aviation disaster cases, and deploy preemption and treaty defenses strategically. The focus throughout is practical guidance that equips attorneys to act decisively at every stage of an aviation dispute.
What Will You Gain
Gain a clear, practice-ready understanding of the current aviation litigation landscape from both the plaintiff and defense perspectives. Learn how to advise clients in real time as case law, federal regulation, and evidentiary standards continue to evolve. Better evaluate jurisdiction and venue choices in domestic and international aviation claims. Anticipate emerging challenges from turbulence-related injuries, digital evidence authentication, and manufacturer liability trends. Deliver strategic counsel that positions cases for maximum recovery or efficient resolution while protecting your client's interests.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: March 20, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Robert A. Clifford, Founder and Senior Partner | Clifford Law Offices
Robert A. Clifford is the founder and senior partner of Clifford Law Offices in Chicago, one of the nation’s premier personal injury and wrongful death litigation firms. Widely regarded as a global leader in aviation litigation, Mr. Clifford has represented families in every domestic commercial crash since 1979 and currently serves as Lead Counsel in the federal litigation for families of the 2019 Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX-8 crash victims. Under his leadership, Clifford Law Offices has recovered more than $5 billion in judgments and settlements for clients, and the firm has been recognized as one of the “50 Elite Firms in the Country” by the National Law Journal.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
Taylor Sandella, Associate | Kreindler & Kreindler LLP
Taylor A. Sandella is an Associate at Kreindler & Kreindler LLP, where she represents plaintiffs in personal injury and wrongful death cases with a focus on aviation litigation. She joined the firm in 2023 following a clerkship at the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Essex Vicinage, where she drafted judicial opinions, research memoranda, and mediated cases. Ms. Sandella is a highly accomplished legal professional with a strong commitment to public service, having earned the Gold Public Service Award from Brooklyn Law School for over 1,000 hours of pro bono work, including representation of veterans through the Veteran Advocacy Project Clinic. She has authored articles on aviation litigation topics for publications including the New York Law Journal and Trial magazine, and was selected as a Super Lawyers Rising Star in 2025.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
John Maggio, Partner | Condon & Forsyth LLP
John Maggio is a Partner at Condon & Forsyth LLP, based in the firm’s Miami and New York offices, where he handles all types of civil, commercial, and products liability litigation with a focus on aviation law. He has represented air carriers, aircraft manufacturers, and insurers in wrongful death, personal injury, and contractual litigation, with extensive experience in claims governed by the Warsaw Convention, Montreal Convention, Airline Deregulation Act, and other international treaties and U.S. aviation statutes. Mr. Maggio has litigated in federal and state courts throughout the United States, including trials in California, Connecticut, New York, Florida, and Texas, and has argued appeals in the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the Second, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
Allison M. Surcouf, Partner | Condon & Forsyth LLP
Allison M. Surcouf is a Partner at Condon & Forsyth LLP in New York, specializing in aviation litigation and alternative dispute resolution. She has extensive experience representing aviation and aerospace companies, including foreign and domestic air carriers as well as aircraft and component part manufacturers, in civil litigation and arbitration involving wrongful death, personal injury, product liability, premises liability, breach of contract, and employment issues. Ms. Surcouf also specializes in advising carriers and insurers on obligations under mandatory Medicare reporting laws and the Medicare Secondary Payer Act, and advises clients on regulatory matters involving the U.S. Department of Transportation and the Federal Aviation Administration.
Education & Credentials
Recognition & Leadership
Professional Involvement
Experience
Session I – Aviation Personal Injury Litigation: Plaintiff Strategies for Evidence, Jurisdiction, and Case Valuation | 1:00pm – 2:00pm
This CLE session provides a strategic, practice-focused roadmap for handling aviation injury cases from intake through resolution. Attendees will learn how to position a case for success from day one, including preserving critical evidence, developing damages early, and avoiding common pitfalls that can undermine value. The session also explores key jurisdictional and venue considerations unique to air travel litigation, including domestic and international claims and strategic filing decisions. It draws on lessons learned from the Boeing 737 Max 8 litigation to illustrate mass aviation disaster case management, multidistrict litigation dynamics, and manufacturer liability strategies, and concludes with practical guidance on prosecuting these cases effectively through targeted discovery and deposition strategies designed to build liability and maximize recovery.
This session will guide attorneys through the threshold question of whether a claim arises under the Montreal Convention or domestic law, exploring the treaty’s two-year statute of repose and strict liability provisions for international carriers, as well as common in-flight accident categories such as overhead bin injuries, beverage cart injuries, and the increasingly prevalent turbulence-related claims. The discussion will address how embarking and disembarking injuries implicate different parties depending on whether the incident occurs in the airport or onboard, including the role of port authority FOIA requests. The session will then examine the Boeing 737 Max 8 litigation, covering both the Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashes and how plaintiff counsel identified the proper defendants, leveraged the MCAS design defect, and navigated MDL consolidation and cross-border jurisdictional challenges. Finally, the session will detail a disciplined intake protocol including witness lockdown, full itinerary review, FOIA requests, NTSB report acquisition, and preservation letter strategies.
Break | 2:00pm – 2:10pm
Session II – Litigating Airline Disputes Under U.S. Law: Preemption, Treaty Claims, and a Practical Defense Playbook | 2:10pm – 3:10pm
This session provides a practical roadmap for defending airline disputes, from early issue-spotting and claim triage to strategic use of Airline Deregulation Act preemption in motion practice. It covers key discovery considerations including operational records, policies, timelines, and focused depositions along with emerging challenges involving digital and AI-generated evidence. This session concludes with a disciplined defense playbook for narrowing issues, leveraging treaty and preemption defenses, and shaping persuasive trial themes.
This session will walk defense attorneys through a systematic framework for triaging airline dispute claims at the earliest stages, identifying which causes of action survive federal preemption and which can be dismissed through early motion practice under the Airline Deregulation Act. The discussion will cover targeted discovery strategies including how to handle operational records, internal airline policies and training materials, incident timelines, and focused deposition topics that can narrow the issues in dispute.
Attorneys will also confront emerging evidentiary challenges posed by digital evidence, AI-generated media, and authenticity questions that are reshaping how parties prove and defend claims. The session will conclude with a practical defense playbook that synthesizes preemption doctrine, treaty defenses, and trial-theme discipline into an actionable strategy for resolving airline disputes efficiently and favorably.