By Steven Moore and Jonathan Pearce

California employment litigation has entered a new era, marked by unprecedented jury awards, soaring punitive damages, and a plaintiff-side bar adept at leveraging venue and emotion. For employers operating in California—especially in Los Angeles County—traditional litigation defense strategies are no longer sufficient. The risk landscape has shifted, and “business as usual” is misaligned with today’s exposure realities. 

Recent verdicts illustrate this shift. In November 2024, a Los Angeles jury awarded $103 million in an age discrimination case, including $83 million in punitive damages. This outcome reflects a broader trend: jurors are increasingly willing to impose severe financial penalties when they perceive employer misconduct or a toxic workplace culture. Similar patterns have emerged in other cases in Los Angeles, such as a $32.2 million disability discrimination and retaliation verdict in November of 2025. Across Los Angeles, Oakland, and San Diego, multi-million-dollar wrongful termination, retaliation, and harassment cases are becoming existential threats to businesses, not just litigation costs. 

This surge in “nuclear” verdicts is systemic, not anecdotal. California law grants plaintiffs broad access to punitive damages, emotional distress claims, and attorneys’ fees. Jury pools are diverse and often skeptical of corporate conduct, while plaintiff attorneys have become highly skilled at narrative framing. For employers, the question is no longer if nuclear verdicts will occur, but how to strategically prevent them. 

Arbitration Agreements: The Foundation of Risk Control

The most effective way to mitigate the risk of nuclear verdicts is to avoid jury trials altogether. Well-crafted arbitration agreements, properly implemented, are a powerful risk management tool. Arbitrators rarely issue verdicts comparable to those from juries; when liability is found, awards typically reflect actual economic loss rather than excessive punishment. To maximize protection, agreements must comply with California contract law, include clear waivers of class and representative claims where permitted, and be presented transparently to both new hires and existing employees. Every enforceable arbitration agreement removes the most unpredictable variable in California litigation—a jury empowered to punish corporations. 

Motions in Limine to Narrow Inflammatory Themes

Juries are receptive to narratives of disrespect or corporate indifference. Targeted motions in limine are critical to shaping the narrative at trial by excluding irrelevant and prejudicial evidence that might otherwise compel a jury to act illogically. For example, in wrongful termination lawsuits, excluding reference to derogatory comments made by defendant employees that were not involved in the termination decision, or plaintiff’s past grievances that are unrelated to the current claim, helps focus the narrative on what is at issue for trial. By removing irrelevant themes that might enflame a jury and invite punishment, attorneys can reduce the risk of a jury incorporating the same into an assessment of damages.

Humanizing the Company at Trial

If arbitration is unavailable and a case proceeds to trial, employers must reconsider how they present themselves to juries. Traditionally, companies send polished executives from headquarters, but in Los Angeles, this approach can backfire. Juries may interpret such detachment negatively. Instead, it’s more effective to have a credible company representative who was directly involved in the case—such as a supervisor, regional HR leader, or department head—testify. This person can speak authentically about the employee and workplace interactions, acknowledge process imperfections, explain remedial steps without conceding liability, and express respect for the plaintiff. Doing so makes the company appear more relatable and compassionate. Humanizing the employer can reduce juror anger, which often drives nuclear damages. 

Emotional Distress Claims: Focus on Causation

Large non-economic awards are typically driven by emotional distress testimony. Plaintiffs often describe humiliation, depression, and trauma, supported by family and friends, leading to substantial jury awards. Defense teams should focus on causation rather than attacking the plaintiff’s character. Targeted discovery into non-workplace stressors—such as personal or financial issues—can reveal alternative sources of distress. Engaging expert witnesses and, where appropriate, pursuing formal mental health examinations can help demonstrate that emotional distress may stem from multiple life circumstances, not solely workplace conduct. Jurors respond to scientific evidence, which can significantly reduce non-economic damages.

Jury Instruction and Verdict Form Engineering

In California, parties may be required to craft joint jury instructions. While the Judicial Counsel of California offers detailed form jury instructions, plaintiffs often make subtle edits to those instructions; the purpose of which is to reframe elements of a claim to soften legal standards or otherwise suggest to the jury that it should decide a certain way. Defense counsel should carefully review proposed jury instructions to ensure that they strictly adhere to California form instructions, apply the correct legal standards, and do not include superfluous language. To craft jury instructions that reduce potential damages, attorneys should also ensure that they include all appropriate mitigating instructions, affirmative defenses, and special instructions founded in case law.

In conjunction with the jury instructions, defense counsel should use a detailed element-by-element special verdict form that explains the appropriate applicable legal standard and requires discrete findings on liability, causation, and damages. This helps to compartmentalize deliberations, increase juror accountability, and reduce momentum towards outsized damages awards.

Punitive Damages: Prepare for the Second Phase

California trials are often bifurcated, with liability and compensatory damages addressed first, followed by a separate phase for punitive damages. Employers must prepare for this second phase well in advance. Identify a financial-condition witness early, build a narrative around responsible corporate stewardship, and bring expert interpretation to the company’s financials. Importantly, seek a directed verdict on punitive damages before the issue reaches the jury, as California law requires proof of “oppression, fraud, or malice”—not mere negligence or poor management. Demonstrating good-faith investigation and policy compliance can be critical in challenging punitive claims. 

Defense Strategy: Credibility Over Combat

Juries value rationality and reasonableness over aggression. Companies that attack plaintiffs personally risk triggering resentment. Instead, emphasize written anti-harassment and EEO policies, documented investigations, consistent coaching, diversity initiatives, training programs, and supervisor accountability. When jurors believe the employer acted reasonably—even if imperfectly—they are less likely to view the case as deserving of punishment, which can dramatically reduce exposure. 

Jury Anchoring: Set the Reference Point

Jury anchoring is a powerful decision-making bias. During closing arguments, plaintiff counsel often proposes an extreme damages figure, which becomes the jury’s mental starting point. If defense counsel fails to offer an alternative, the plaintiff’s anchor dominates deliberations. Modern defense teams now provide a lower, evidence-based damages anchor, giving juries a rational reference point and reducing the gravitational pull of the plaintiff’s ask. For example, in a wrongful termination case, defense counsel may respond to an emotional distress damages figure by proffering a tangible calculation of the cost of therapy from the date of termination to the date of trial. Providing a response figure that is founded fact and reality can help recalibrate the jury’s expectations.

Conclusion: Adaptation Is Essential

The California employment litigation landscape has fundamentally changed. High-exposure cases are now routine, and juries are willing to punish employers aggressively when they perceive wrongdoing. For in-house counsel and HR leaders, avoiding nuclear outcomes requires a strategic recalibration: enforce arbitration agreements, present relatable witnesses, use expert-driven causation analysis, develop punitive damages strategies, emphasize reasonableness, and anchor damages effectively. Preparation and prevention are now essential components of corporate governance.