Philip M. Pasquarello is the nation’s Top Gun. Literally.

The graduate of the Thomas R. Kline School of Law at Drexel University had a phenomenal record at the law school for winning mock trial competitions, culminating with his selection as winner of the “Top Gun” award given to the nation’s best individual mock trial advocate in 2018.

Before that, Pasquarello led Kline Law to back-to-back team victories in national mock trial competitions in invitation-only contests against some of the nation’s top law schools. He won top individual honors in both those 2016 and 2017 competitions as well as in regional contests. He currently serves as Trial Competition Director at Kline Law, overseeing the national mock trial teams and competitions hosted at the school, including its annual Battle of the Experts competition.

Most recently, Pasquarello was co-counsel in a 2022 case that resulted in a $30 million settlement and safety improvements for a seven-year-old girl who suffered brain damage in an accident involving a commercial vehicle in Delaware County, Pa.  

In 2020, Pasquarello was co-counsel in litigation that brought a $12.75 million settlement for a patient who suffered brain damage when a medical device manufacturer’s Neuroblate surgical device broke during intracranial surgery. (Read article)

Prior to that case, Pasquarello was co-counsel in litigation that resulted in an $80 million jury verdict against Johnson & Johnson for a woman injured by a surgically implanted vaginal mesh device. The May 2019 verdict in Philadelphia followed a six-week trial and included $30 million in compensatory and $50 million in punitive damages, making it the largest compensatory award nationally in a vaginal mesh case. 

Several months earlier, Pasquarello was co-counsel in litigation that culminated in another vaginal mesh verdict against J&J, this one concluding in a $41 million award against the behemoth pharmaceutical company on behalf of a Pennsylvania woman who was left permanently injured by the company’s defective vaginal mesh implant device. The verdict included $25 million in punitive damages.

Pasquarello was named a Rising Star for 2022 and 2023 by the independent lawyer survey group Super Lawyers, designating him among the top 2.5 percent of attorneys in the state who are 40 or younger or practicing 10 years or less.

Before becoming an attorney, Pasquarello served as a law clerk at Kline & Specter, where he did legal research, assisted in trial preparation and drafted complaints involving medical malpractice cases. His practice concentrates in medical malpractice and personal injury cases at the firm.

Pasquarello worked internships at another Philadelphia law firm and at the United States Attorney’s Office, where he handled both criminal and civil litigation.

Pasquarello won several awards in law school in addition to those for mock trial prowess. He graduated seventh in his class, was on the Dean’s List every semester and was the winner of the Kline & Specter Award for Exceptional Advocacy and the Rising Advocate Scholarship. He won Best Student Performance awards for four classes: Criminal Law, Introduction to Trial Advocacy, Evidence, and Advanced Trial Advocacy, Civil.

Pasquarello earned his bachelor’s degree at the University of Delaware, where he also was mock trial team president.

Pasquarello delivering his closing speech at Baylor Law's Top Gun National Mock Trial Competition. Click to watch