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Christopher A. Seeger

New Jersey Attorney (born 1960) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christopher A. Seeger
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Christopher A. Seeger is an American lawyer who specializes in multidistrict mass tort and class action litigation. He received the most multidistrict litigation (MDL) appointments of any lawyer between 2016 and 2019 according to a 2020 ALM study.[1] Seeger is a founding partner of the firm Seeger Weiss LLP.

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Early life

A native of New York City, Seeger is the son of a union carpenter and a homemaker. He pursued an amateur boxing career until he was 22. Seeger worked as a carpenter before beginning his undergraduate studies at Hunter College.[2]

Seeger graduated summa cum laude from Hunter in 1987, and magna cum laude from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in 1990. While in law school, he served as managing editor of the Cardozo Law Review.[3]

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Career

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Seeger's first job out of law school was with a "white-shoe" firm that represented major corporations, which he left in 1993 to work instead on behalf of plaintiffs.[4] In 1999 he co-founded with Stephen A. Weiss the plaintiffs’ law firm Seeger Weiss LLP. As of 2020, the firm’s main office is in Ridgefield Park, New Jersey.[5]

In 2003, Seeger recovered a $2 million verdict following a six-week jury trial against drug maker Pfizer on behalf of a Brooklyn resident who sustained livery injury following her use of the diabetes medication Rezulin. The case was the first Rezulin matter to be tried in New York and represented a watershed result in the nationwide Rezulin litigation. Seeger subsequently reached a global settlement with Pfizer on behalf of his firm's clients.[6]

In 2005, Seeger was appointed co-lead counsel of Vioxx-related MDL against Merck by U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon.[7] In 2007, Seeger won a $47.5 million verdict on behalf of an individual plaintiff, Idaho postal worker Frederick "Mike" Humeston, who suffered a heart attack after taking the drug.[8] In 2008, Seeger was a lead negotiator in the $4.85 billion Vioxx settlement on behalf of plaintiffs.[9] Seeger was one of the first lawyers to file a Vioxx-related injury lawsuit against Merck.[10]

In 2009, Seeger represented homeowners who had defective Chinese-manufactured drywall installed in their homes. The drywall emitted noxious fumes which caused headaches and rashes, made breathing difficult,[11][12] and damaged household wiring and plumbing.[13] Seeger secured the initial trial victories against the companies that produced and distributed the drywall, paving the way for a subsequent $1 billion nationwide settlement.[14]

In 2011, he was appointed to the Plaintiffs' Executive Committee in the multidistrict litigation related to DePuy Orthopaedics' defective hip implants,[15] which resulted in DePuy's parent company Johnson & Johnson agreeing to a global settlement of $2.5 billion.[16]

Since 2012, Seeger served as lead counsel representing retired NFL players in a suit brought against the league for hiding the dangers of concussion injuries. He negotiated a settlement in which the NFL agreed to pay an uncapped amount, estimated to be over $1.5 billion,[17] to address the medical costs of over 20,000 former players who suffered traumatic brain injuries during their professional careers. The settlement was approved by a federal court and upheld by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in April 2016.[18] As of September 2023, more than $1.2 billion in claims have been approved.[19]

In 2016, Seeger was appointed to the Plaintiffs’ Steering Committee in the “clean diesel” litigation against German automaker Volkswagen in connection to the company's project to game the emissions tests on their cars. He also served on the settlement committee, which negotiated an approximately $21 billion settlement with VW on behalf of plaintiffs.[20][21][22]

In 2017, Seeger served as lead negotiator in litigation against agrochemical giant Syngenta regarding Viptera genetically modified corn.[22] The settlement, reached in 2018, totaled $1.5 billion for plaintiffs (primarily U.S. corn farmers).[23] It represents the largest agricultural litigation settlement in U.S. history.[24]

In 2019, Seeger was appointed co-lead counsel in multidistrict litigation against 3M. The litigation includes over 250,000 veterans suffering from hearing loss and tinnitus after using earplugs 3M sold to the U.S. Department of Defense, which the suit claims the company knew to be faulty.[25] In 2023, he negotiated a $6.01 billion settlement to resolve the case.[26]

Seeger was appointed to the Executive and Settlement Committees in nationwide litigation against drug companies in multidistrict opioid litigation.[27][28] Over 90 percent of litigating local governments participated in global settlements with AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health, and McKesson, and Johnson & Johnson totaling $26 billion. To date, Seeger has been involved in over $50 billion in settlements through the National Prescription Opioid Litigation.[29]

In 2021, it was announced that Seeger, along with civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, would be representing the family of Henrietta Lacks in a lawsuit against several pharmaceutical companies that have profited from the cell line HeLa, which is based on cervical cancer cells taken from Lacks without her knowledge in 1951.[30] The first lawsuit was filed against ThermoFisher.[31] On August 5, 2024, Seeger and his co-counsel filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Lacks family against Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation and Novartis Gene Therapies Inc. (“Novartis”), as well as Viatris Inc. and its subsidiary Mylan Pharmaceuticals.[32]

In 2022, Seeger was appointed Co-lead Counsel in an MDL prosecuting claims related to the disintegration or outgassing of foam in Philips CPAP sleep apnea machines and other Philips assisted breathing devices.[33] Seeger was the lead negotiator for a $550+ million uncapped class action settlement announced in September 2023, resolving economic loss claims of users and payers impacted by the recall.[34] After receiving final approval for the economic loss settlement, additional settlements were reached in April 2024 to resolve plaintiffs’ personal injury claims for $1.075 billion and medical monitoring claims for $25 million.[35]

Seeger was appointed Co-lead Counsel in the Proton-Pump Inhibitor Products Liability Litigation on behalf of patients who suffered kidney injuries while using proton-pump inhibitor drugs.[36] He reached a $425 million settlement with AstraZeneca[37] and additional agreements with GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, and Procter & Gamble, bringing the total value of the resolutions to $590.4 million.[38]

In 2024, Seeger was appointed as Plaintiffs’ Coordinating Counsel in the MultiPlan Health Insurance Providers Litigation by the Honorable Judge Matthew F. Kennelly.[39]

In 2025, Seeger was appointed lead counsel in the Depo-Provera Products Liability Litigation by the Honorable Judge M. Casey Rodgers of the Northern District of Florida.[40]

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Personal life

Since his time as an amateur boxer,[41] Seeger has also competed in Brazilian jiu-jitsu and was awarded first place for his age and weight class in the 2012 Pan American No-Gi Jiu-Jitsu Championship.[3][42] He received his black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu in 2017.[43]

Awards and recognition

Seeger is an elected member of the American Law Institute and a Fellow of the International Society of Barristers. He sits on the advisory board at the New York University Law School Civil Justice Center and on the Leadership Council at the Bolch Judicial Institute’s Leadership Council Duke Law School. In 2025, Seeger Weiss LLP, led by Seeger, made a $500,000 donation to the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law School to establish The Seeger Weiss/Daniel Anderl Memorial Fund.[44] He is a member of the National Trial Lawyers Round Table. Chris was recognized with The National Law Journal’s Elite Trial Lawyers Lifetime Achievement Award[45] in 2022 and Plaintiff Attorney of the Year in 2024.[46] Seeger has been listed in the USA Guide by Chambers and Partners in the category Product Liability: Plaintiffs from 2007 to 2025.[47]

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See also

Notes

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