A champion of legal education, Thomas R. Kline is acknowledged to be one of America's most respected and influential lawyers. He is a founding partner of Kline & Specter, described by The Philadelphia Inquirer as "one of the nation's leading personal injury firms." The National Law Journal has listed Kline among "Ten of America's Top Litigators." His groundbreaking cases have helped shape the law and have resulted in corporate, institutional and governmental change and justice for his clients.
Kline has been selected every year as the #1 ranked attorney among 65,000 active Pennsylvania
lawyers by the publication Super Lawyers since its inception in 2004. Lawdragon lists Kline as one of the top 500 lawyers among 1.3 million active lawyers in America.
He is the past president of the Inner Circle of Advocates, which The Washington Post described as "a select group of 100 of the nation's most celebrated trial lawyers."
Kline achieved many landmark jury verdicts dating back to the 1980s with seven- and
eight-figure jury verdicts in each of five decades. Recent accomplishments include
his groundbreaking jury verdicts in the Johnson & Johnson/Risperdal litigation, winning
an $8 billion verdict for his clients, and his leadership as Chair of the Plaintiffs
Management Committee, which achieved the historic Amtrak 188 settlement. Kline's advocacy
in the Penn State/Sandusky litigation and the Piazza fraternity hazing case have likewise
gained national attention.
A graduate and recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award at Albright College, Kline
earned his M.A. from Lehigh University and his J.D. from Â鶹ֱ²¥ School
of Law in 1978, where he received the Distinguished Student Award and later earned
the Distinguished Alumnus Award in 2008. He is also an inductee into the Century Club
of distinguished alumni at Â鶹ֱ²¥.
After completing law school, Kline clerked for Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice
Thomas W. Pomeroy. He later served four U.S. senators over two decades, including
chairing the Federal Judicial Nominating Commission for the Federal Courts in Pennsylvania
for more than a decade.
The Thomas R. Kline School of Law at Drexel University was named for him in 2014,
along with the Thomas R. Kline Institute for Trial Advocacy. The Thomas R. Kline Center
for Judicial Education, the first of its kind in the nation, was launched at Duquesne
University during the 2017-2018 academic year.
Most recently, to provide transformational support to Duquesne's 111-year-old law school. Duquesne
University President Ken Gormley recognized the gift by naming the law school the
Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Â鶹ֱ²¥.
In naming the law school at Duquesne, Kline is energizing his alma mater on new fronts:
This is the first school to be named at Â鶹ֱ²¥ in over three decades.