🧪 Environmental & Toxic Torts Experts
Expert Witnesses Who Survive Rule 702 in Environmental & Toxic Tort Litigation
On PFAS plumes, Prop 65 safe-harbor math, and other exposures — Connect delivers conflict-cleared modelers, toxicologists, and clinicians whose methods courts accept.
24–72h
To 2–3 vetted candidates
100%
Conflict-checked profiles
0
Cost to search
Experts We've Sourced
Modelers who reconstruct air and groundwater pathways
Industrial hygienists who translate models into workplace exposure doses
Toxicologists and epidemiologists who apply Bradford Hill and rule out alternatives
Clinicians who link exposures to differential diagnoses
Prop 65 analysts and economists who run safe-harbor defenses and quantify property loss
The Challenge
Where Toxic Tort Teams Lose Ground on Experts
Rule 702 demands dose, pathway, and causation backed by reliable methods. When experts contradict each other — or MDL and notice deadlines close in — cases lose leverage fast.
✕Dose makes the case — without thresholds, experts get excluded.
✕MDL bottlenecks strain even deep benches when coordinated reports are due.
✕Conflicts are a minefield — big consultancies are tied up across PFAS, talc, and benzene.
✕Citizen-suit deadlines collapse prep time, with 60-day CWA and Prop 65 clocks running.
How Connect Helps
How Connect Helps in Environmental & Toxic Torts
Built to deliver a cohesive expert stack — modeler to clinician — so assumptions align and contradictions don't unravel testimony.
✓Deliver rapid shortlists with conflicts and availability cleared before you see names
✓Review dose, exposure pathways, and causation opinions for Rule 702 reliability
✓Tailor sourcing for MDL coordination, Prop 65 notices, and citizen-suit deadlines
✓Align the modeler, hygienist, toxicologist, and clinician on the same assumptions
✓Handle review logistics, interview scheduling, and billing in full
Why It Matters
Toxic tort litigation turns on three risks: exclusion, conflict, and time. Connect secures experts whose opinions align on exposure, dose, and causation — and whose calendars match the clock you're on.