
Michael J. Fuller
Founding Partner at Farrell & FullerMike’s philosophy is simple but relentless. Hold corporations accountable where it counts.

“The best change we’ve seen has been due to the legal system - and that’s because you hit em’ where it hurts. In their pockets.”
Michael J. Fuller is a founding partner at Farrell & Fuller and a nationally-respected trial lawyer with a reputation for taking on corporations whose misconduct harms the most vulnerable. His career is defined by action. He doesn’t just file cases. He takes cases from inception all the way to trial, if that’s what it takes.
Fearless. Formidable.
Farrell & Fuller
At Farrell & Fuller, we do not measure success in headlines. We measure it in lives changed, systems challenged, and justice delivered. These numbers reflect what is possible when committed trial lawyers stand up to corporate wrongdoing.
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60 Billion Recovered in Opioid Litigation
Mike Fuller and Paul Farrell Jr. helped lead the national opioid litigation that forced pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, and dispensers to pay more than $60 billion in settlements to communities across the country.
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1989 Opioid Lawsuits Consolidated Into The Largest Mass Tort in U.S. History
Farrell & Fuller has served as lead or co-lead counsel for more than 700 cities, counties, and states, consolidating over 2000 Opioid lawsuits and helping them recover from the damage caused by systemic public health failures and corporate negligence.
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79550 Product Liability Claims Consolidated
In one of the earliest transvaginal mesh cases filed in the country, Paul Farrell, partnering with Mike Fuller, helped launch a national MDL that brought together over 80,000 women harmed by a defective medical device. The case held manufacturers accountable and changed how these products are regulated.

"We are the workhorses. We are the litigators. We have the leadership roles. We do not get involved in a case unless we truly believe in it.”
Mike has built his practice on the belief that litigation is about more than gathering claims. “A lot of mass tort firms are aggregators. They just group cases together, file them and let them sit while someone else does the work,” he explains. “We are the workhorses. We are the litigators. We have the leadership roles. We do not get involved in a case unless we truly believe in it.”
His impact is not just measured in verdicts or settlements. It is found in the broader reforms his cases have helped spark and in the message sent to corporations nationwide: You will be held accountable.


Stand up for the injured and the communities harmed by corporate negligence.