Buy the Paper Version

About the Author

  • Jonathan G. Stein
    Mr. Stein is a former insurance adjuster who now handles cases for injured individuals. Most of his practice consists of MIST cases. You can read more about Mr. Stein the post entitled "About the Book Author."
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Books

October 08, 2007

An update on buying the book

I have received several inquiries from employees at major insurance companies trying to buy my book. While I appreciate that they want to see my tips and tricks, I must be very clear about this:

I am not selling my book to insurance companies, adjusters, employees of insurance companies and defense attorneys.

I understand that they want to learn what I have learned. However, for the integrity of the book, and to keep it as a useful tool to Plaintiff's attorneys, this always has been and always will be my rule.

October 04, 2007

What others are saying about the book

My good friend and trial lawyer extraordinaire Ben Glass wrote a piece in his Great Legal Marketing newsletter about the book. (By the way, if you are a personal injury attorney reading this, you MUST look at Ben’s materials. They are the best on marketing a personal injury firm.) Here it is:

You know I read a lot and am constantly recommending and giving books to my Mastermind group. Mostly, though, those books are about marketing and mindset. However, the book I’m recommending here is about neither. It’s actually a valuable book that would help many of you in your law practices.

Litigating MIST Cases: A Practical Approach was written by Jonathan Stein, a personal injury lawyer who lives and practices in Elk Grove, California. Jonathan is a charter member of GLM and is a smart marketer and good lawyer. Jonathan worked as an insurance adjuster during law school and first practiced in a firm that represented insurance companies. He settled hundreds of MIST cases and truly knows insurance company secrets.

MIST stands for “minor impact soft tissue,” a phrase that was coined by the insurance industry several years ago and that has been adopted by plaintiffs’ lawyers. Typically, vehicles involved in these crashes seem to have minimal damage. The insurance industry has used “MIST” in its propaganda to convince people (who will eventually be jurors) that plaintiffs in MIST cases are not really injured since there is not much body damage to the cars.

For some reason that many of his colleagues cannot fathom, Jonathan focuses his personal injury practice on MIST cases. His colleagues don’t understand what Jonathan is doing, because MIST cases have notoriously low value and are difficult to handle. Insurance companies make very low offers and then love to make lawyers go to trial because, if you have to try the case, you will lose money. Unlike many lawyers who have quit accepting MIST cases, Jonathan has found a way to help this population and have a thriving law practice.

I have read Jonathan’s book and recommend it highly. Frankly, a personal injury lawyer who does not handle MIST cases will benefit from the strategies and information Jonathan discloses. Jonathan’s book reads like one written by an experienced trial lawyer, which he is. He “tells it like it is” about handling these cases. He bluntly tells the reader that these cases are individually of low value and difficult because the insurance company makes them so. Nevertheless, he supports the importance of representing this segment of the injured population and declares that if you do many cases – not just one – you will help many people and make money.

The book is well organized and easy to follow.  In cogent and clear fashion, Jonathan reveals strategies for negotiating this specific type of case with insurance companies. True to the kind of guy Jonathan is, though, he goes well beyond the discussion. He has given us loads of forms, including a checklist, letters to use when initially gathering information, examples of various demand letters and responses to insurance company denials (with explanations for when to use each one), complaints, discovery and motions in limine. Jonathan has developed and actually uses these forms and techniques in his practice so, basically, he is revealing in this book lessons he has learned during his years of practice.

In short, I would recommend you buy Jonathan’s book and add it to the shelf where you keep the practice manuals you frequently refer to. Better yet, buy one for each of your assistants. After all, they spend most of their time doing what this book teaches them to do and they will find the book written so a real person, not just a lawyer, can understand it.

You (and your staff) will benefit from having this litigation tool nearby. Let me know what you think of his book.

About the Author: Ben Glass is America’s premier authority on effective, ethical and outside-the-box marketing for lawyers. While Ben is a personal injury and medical malpractice attorney, he has coaching and mastermind members who practice estate planning, criminal and traffic defense, worker’s compensation, ERISA litigation, worker’s compensation and more. He is also the author of the Ultimate Personal Injury Marketing and Practice Building Toolkit. (http://www.ethical-lawyer-marketing.com)

August 10, 2007

Now Accepting Credit Cards

If you want to buy the book, but you don't want to send a check or use Paypal, I am now accepting credit cards. Feel free to contact me for my credit card form.

July 12, 2007

New Report for Purchasers

Buy a copy of my new book and I am giving you a BRAND new, free report. This report you can use as a handout to chiropractors to provide them with 10 tips to help them treat MIST patients.

With this report, you can explain to chiropractors why they should not release their tax ID numbers, why they need to be careful on who they work with, and why they need to keep good records. There are seven other tips.

These tips will help you show the chiropractor the value in learning about MIST cases and how the chiropractor can treat the patient to help you accomplish your goal - obtain a fair and reasonable settlement for your client.

Order the book now (either paper or PDF) and you get the report FREE! This is information you will not get with any other MIST book.

July 02, 2007

Table of Contents

Here is the table of contents for Litigating MIST Cases: A Practical Approach from Intake through Trial:

Preface

Chapter 1: Magic Words

Chapter 2: Colossus

Chapter 3: Client Intake

Chapter 4: Early Stages of Representation

Chapter 5: Negotiation

Chapter 6: The Lawsuit

Chapter 7: Discovery

Chapter 8: Expert Witnesses

Chapter 9: Settlement During Litigation

Chapter 10: Trial

Conclusion

Appendix A: Resources

Appendix B: Forms

Remember, email me at mist@jonathangstein.com for more information!

July 01, 2007

Announcing the Release of my new book

I am pleased to announce the release of my new book. The title: Litigating MIST Cases, A Practical Approach from Intake through Trial.

The book has over 250 pages of tips, forms, and practical advice on how to effectively handle MIST cases. I am self publishing the book after spending much time working on it. The book comes from my experiences as an adjuster and an attorney. I am sharing my secrets on how I effectively handle a law practice made up of a lot of MIST cases.

You can get the book in PDF or in paper format. The cost is $125 for the paper version and $100 for the PDF version. (Plus tax, where applicable.) Both versions come with the forms in Microsoft Word, where applicable.

If you want the book, email me and let me know which version. I accept payment by check and Paypal.

Of course, I welcome your feedback, comments and ideas.

Jonathan

Buy the PDF Version

Discounts for my readers

  • Julie Goren, author of Litigation by the Numbers, is now offering $20 off her Combo Pak through November 30, 2007. http://litigationbythenumbers.com/MIST.html This is a great offer. I have Litigation By The Numbers in my office and use it with most of my pleadings. Take a look at it and order through this special offer. Thanks for all of your support of my book. Jonathan