Benjamin Lloyd Crump, 51, is an American attorney who specializes in civil rights and personal injury cases.
Crump has won over 200 cases relating to police brutality, with his firm earning a third of each settlement.
Crump has represented low-profile cases as well as notable ones, one being the Trayvon Martin death in 2012.
In addition to the civil rights cases, Crump has represented those affected by Johnson & Johnson’s baby powder ovarian cancer crisis, and those poisoned by the Flint, Michigan water.
You can search his name in a legal research data base, such as Westlaw or LexisNexis, but that will yield only cases in which formal written decisions were published. This approach is more useful for an appellate lawyer than for a trial lawyer.
Even assuming that the information you want is somehow available, you have to realize that it is a meaningless question and the answer tells you nothing important. The best attorneys, especially in criminal defense and appellate work, are engaged for the hardest cases, and they get licked more often than those who do not face the real challenges.
I assume you are a defendant in a criminal case.#N#Personally I do not keep any record as to wins or losses as the term is really meaningless. Why? Because there are many ways to win. One can win and have lost the case.
I'll let a KY attorney answer whether the KY bar keeps track of win/lose data. My guess, however, is "no." Really good attorneys can lose many cases. Why? They don't make the facts or the law. The government makes the law and the client makes the facts. If they don't line up, the client loses, which means the attorney loses...