Product Description
Leading Justice is a full-service marketing company working with law firms on a cash-buy basis to sign up fully-qualified, fraud-free Roundup cancer cases. Here at Leading Justice, we can custom-tailor your firm’s Roundup advertising needs and help you sign up cases via internal cash buys. Our clients simply pay an agency fee to cover the cost of Roundup advertising, plus a fee for each case we sign, and any data we generate for your firm belongs to you. We also cross-qualify all of our contacts, so any data we generate that isn’t eligible for the target campaign is reviewed to determine whether it qualifies for another type of claim. By using innovative approaches to target contacts specifically related to Roundup use and side effects like non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Leading Justice will increase your firm’s Roundup caseload. If you are interested in helping victims of alleged Roundup cancer side effects, our extensive consumer reach and direct advertising strategies at Leading Justice give you the competitive edge and confidence to allocate your full budget, with the knowledge that your money is being spent in the best way possible.
Each and every law firm we work with at Leading Justice plays a critical role in determining how we classify claims as qualified or not. While our experience working with plaintiff law firms allows us to recognize a great case when we see one, we will customize our Roundup case intake specifications to the exact criteria you are seeking. So, if your firm has specific Roundup qualifying case criteria you would like us to use, we can train our intake specialists to apply the criteria to each phone call and email they receive. By eliminating the middle man, Leading Justice offers clients an opportunity for internal cash buys of Roundup data with no chance of fraud.
Roundup Side Effect Litigation
Roundup is the most popular herbicide in the world, manufactured by Monsanto, and widely used since the mid-1990s, when the company began genetically engineering soy, cotton and corn seeds so that they could survive being sprayed by Roundup. As a result of the genetic modification (GMO), farmers could spray Roundup over entire fields, killing weeds without harming the crops. Estimates suggest that Roundup is sprayed on more than 80% of croplands in the United States, and in addition to being used in commercial agriculture, Roundup is also commonly used by landscapers and home gardeners to control the growth of weeds in backyards, parks, orchards and gardens. With the widespread use of Roundup over the course of several decades, serious concerns have been raised recently about the potential for individuals exposed to the herbicide to develop cancer.
Roundup contains the active ingredient glyphosate, a chemical that blocks an enzyme plants need to survive, which makes it an effective weed or grass killer. Unfortunately, glyphosate has also been linked to cancer, and in March 2015, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), a division of the World Health Organization (WHO), declared Roundup as “probably carcinogenic for humans,” citing “convincing evidence” that glyphosate exposure increased the risk of cancer in laboratory rats and mice. Since the IARC issued its warning, a growing body of research has examined the potential link between exposure to Roundup and cancer, particularly a type of cancer that attacks the lymphatic system, known as non-Hodgkin lymphoma. According to reports, even people who live near fields or farms where Roundup is sprayed, and people who handle soil contaminated with the weed killer, may be at risk for non-Hodgkin lymphoma from Roundup. As of October 2016, at least 37 federal Roundup lawsuits have been filed against Monsanto.