$800 Million Settlement for Route 91 Harvest Shooting Victims Against MGM Resorts
Won by Eglet Adams.
Robert Eglet of Eglet Adams served as lead counsel for approximately 2,500 of the more than 4,400 plaintiffs who secured an $800 million settlement from MGM Resorts International over the October 1, 2017 Route 91 Harvest Festival mass shooting, one of the largest victim-compensation settlements in U.S. history.
What happened
On the night of October 1, 2017, gunman Stephen Paddock opened fire from a 32nd-floor room at Mandalay Bay hotel on a crowd of more than 22,000 people attending the Route 91 Harvest country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip. Fifty-eight people were killed and hundreds more were wounded in what became the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history. Thousands of survivors and family members were left with physical injuries, psychological trauma, and financial losses that would define the legal battle ahead.
MGM Resorts International owned both Mandalay Bay and the festival grounds where the attack occurred. Plaintiffs argued that MGM failed to implement adequate security measures that could have detected or disrupted the shooter before he was able to carry an arsenal of assault-style weapons through the hotel and into his room. The company disputed liability throughout the litigation, and even invoked a federal anti-terrorism statute in an effort to move cases to federal court, a legal maneuver that drew sharp criticism and public backlash from survivors.
Robert Eglet of Eglet Adams took on the role of lead plaintiffs' counsel, representing approximately 2,500 victims and families. He worked alongside co-counsel Mark Robinson of Robinson Calcagnie and Kevin Boyle of Panish Shea and Boyle, as well as attorneys from roughly 65 firms in total. After approximately eight months of mediation, the parties reached a settlement agreement announced on October 3, 2019.
The settlement was structured as a range: MGM's insurers committed a minimum of $735 million, with MGM itself contributing additional funds contingent on claimant participation, up to a ceiling of $800 million. An independent claims administrator was appointed to evaluate and distribute funds. Claimants with non-visible injuries who did not seek medical care were guaranteed a minimum recovery of $5,000. MGM admitted no liability.
Chief Judge Linda Bell of the Eighth Judicial District Court approved the settlement on September 30, 2020, with retired judges Jennifer Togliatti and Louis Meisinger overseeing fund distribution. The settlement was widely reported as the third-largest victim-compensation fund in U.S. history and the first time a corporation paid damages specifically in connection with a mass shooting. Eglet stated that all of his clients ultimately received their money.
Sources
This account is drawn from contemporaneous public reporting and the court record.
- 1.Las Vegas Review-Journal: Las Vegas shooting victims, MGM reach settlement up to $800M (Oct. 3, 2019)
- 2.Las Vegas Review-Journal: Judge approves $800M settlement for Route 91 victims (2020)
- 3.KTNV Channel 13 Las Vegas: Massive settlement expected in 1 October shooting (2019)
- 4.News3LV (KSNV): MGM Resorts agrees to settlement in One October shooting worth up to $800M (2019)
- 5.NPR: Las Vegas Shooting Settlement: MGM Resorts To Pay Up To $800 Million (Oct. 3, 2019)
- 6.CBS News Los Angeles: Up to $800M deal reached to settle lawsuits in Las Vegas massacre (2019)