Greg Prysock is the managing partner of the North Florida office of Morgan & Morgan, P.A. and a member of the firm's Executive Committee. He was raised in Jacksonville, FL and graduated from Terry Parker High School. Mr. Prysock attended the University of Florida and received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1991. As an undergraduate, he was elected President of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. He then attended the University of Florida College of Law, where he graduated with honors in 1995.
Mr. Prysock began his legal career working for a statewide civil trial defense firm, specializing in medical malpractice, nursing home, catastrophic personal injury and wrongful death cases. In 1999, he joined Morgan & Morgan and began aggressively pursuing claims on behalf of clients injured by the negligence of others. Since joining the firm, he has represented hundreds of clients and their families and has obtained multiple awards in excess of one million dollars. In 2006, the Florida Bar named Mr. Prysock as a Board Certified Civil Trial Attorney, a distinction given to less than 2% of all attorneys practicing in the State of Florida. This certification is the highest level of recognition by the Florida Bar in the area of Civil Trial Litigation.
For the past two years, Florida Trend Magazine has designated Mr. Prysock as one of its statewide "Legal Elite Attorneys." Additionally, for the past 3 years, Law & Politics Magazine selected him as a "Florida Super Lawyer."
In April 2010, Mr. Prysock obtained a 90 million dollar jury verdict on behalf of his client in a lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. The client was widowed when her husband died of lung cancer after years of smoking. Two national legal publications ranked the verdict as one of the top ten verdicts of the year in the United States.
In May 2011, Mr. Prysock went to trial in another tobacco case against Philip Morris USA and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. His client was the surviving husband of a woman who died from complications of COPD caused by cigarette smoking. After 3 and 1/2 weeks of trial, the jury returned a verdict of 40 million dollars against the cigarette manufacturers.
Member of:
· Florida Justice Association
- Eagle Member
(Also at Jacksonville Office)