Morgan & Morgan filed a class action lawsuit regarding the
Equifax data breach that occurred in 2017. In 2009, Morgan & Morgan represented Charles Marvin Moore of
Altamonte Springs, Florida, who filed a
wrongful death claim against Shoot Straight gun range in
Casselberry, Florida, after his former wife
shot and killed their son Mitchell inside the shooting range, despite the woman being banned from accessing firearms due to past hospitalizations under the
Baker Act. After Moore dropped the wrongful-death suit in January 2010, he filed a separate legal action in May 2011 against Morgan & Morgan and former firm attorney Carolyn M. Salzmann, alleging that the case had been dismissed with prejudice and seeking $15,000 in damages. Morgan & Morgan stated that Salzmann was no longer employed by the firm and that it had separately sued her over money it alleged she owed the firm. In 2018, the firm, along with co-counsels DiCello Levitt & Casey, and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, filed a lawsuit following a data breach that allegedly affected approximately 230 million Americans and 110 million businesses. In a case brought by Morgan & Morgan, Florida-based Healogics Inc. agreed in 2018 to pay $22.51 million to settle False Claims Act allegations that it knowingly billed Medicare for medically unnecessary services. The firm represented several victims of the Sand Blaster roller coaster derailment on June 15, 2018, at the Daytona Beach Boardwalk. It was among the law firms acting on behalf of the plaintiffs in the
2015 California gas leak case. On October 6, 2022,
Bethenny Frankel filed suit against
TikTok Inc. in the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York after Frankel learned that her images and video content were being used to sell counterfeit products. The lawsuit focused on TikTok's technology, owned by the Chinese company
ByteDance, which allowed users to create fake images and videos in which Bethenny Frankel appeared promoting various goods and services in violation of Frankel's
right of publicity. Following a
mass shooting incident at a
Walmart Supercenter attorneys from the Morgan & Morgan filed two lawsuits on behalf of employees against Walmart, each seeking $50 million in damages. The firm filed a lawsuit arising from the
2023 Ohio train derailment. In December 2023, the law firm filed cases against pharmaceutical companies
Novo Nordisk and
Eli Lilly, alleging that the GLP-1 drugs
Ozempic and
Mounjaro caused severe gastrointestinal injuries such as gastroparesis. Representing plaintiff Jaclyn Bjorklund in federal court in Louisiana, the firm also petitioned for the consolidation of related cases before the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. Beginning in 2023, Morgan & Morgan represented families in civil lawsuits arising from the
Harvard morgue case, in which body parts donated for research through
Harvard Medical School's anatomical gift program were allegedly stolen and sold, and the remains mishandled, causing emotional distress. In 2025, the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court allowed key claims in those cases to proceed, ruling that plaintiffs could pursue certain negligence and related theories against Harvard and other defendants. In October 2024, the firm filed a wrongful death lawsuit against
Boar's Head over a fatal
listeria infection allegedly linked to its products. In December of that year, Morgan & Morgan initiated a lawsuit on behalf of 18-year-old Bryce Martinez from
Pennsylvania, alleging that eleven major food manufacturers, including
Coca-Cola,
PepsiCo, and
Nestlé, contributed to his
Type 2 diabetes and
fatty liver disease through the promotion of addictive
ultra-processed foods. The case, filed in Philadelphia, alleged that the companies intentionally created harmful products without adequate health warnings. The firm also brought a sexual assault case against prominent individuals in the luxury real estate sector. In 2025 the firm sued when a woman died inhaling
nitrous oxide from a company's product and alleged there was inadequate fire safety at a Massachusetts assisted-living facility. In 2025, Morgan & Morgan secured a US$3 million verdict in a
Takata airbag injury case. In July 2025, the firm represented former Florida state senator
Daphne Campbell in a wrongful death lawsuit over the shooting of her son at a North Miami Beach condominium complex, obtaining a jury verdict of US$100 million against the property’s owners and managers. Morgan & Morgan also represented a class of smartphone users in a California data privacy lawsuit alleging that
Google improperly tracked users' locations. In September 2025, a jury awarded approximately US$425.7 million in damages, one of the largest verdicts to date in a U.S. consumer privacy case. == Political involvement ==