Richards & Richards LLP
101 Bradford Road, Suite 100, Wexford, PA 15090, Wexford, PA 15090
About Richards & Richards LLP
Richards & Richards LLP is a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania law firm established in 1968. The firm focuses on medical malpractice and birth injury cases, also handling estate planning and real estate matters. Managing partner Veronica A. Richards is a nurse practitioner and attorney who focuses exclusively on medical negligence. The firm limits its caseload to provide personalized client service throughout Pennsylvania. It has secured significant verdicts, including a $21.6 million medical malpractice award.
Our Attorneys
Notable Case Results
Case results are sourced directly from attorney websites by Injuria.ai's data infrastructure, which actively monitors 22,000+ personal injury law firms. They are not results obtained by ThatCarHitMe.com. Every case is unique and must be evaluated on its own facts. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The results shown are not necessarily representative of all results obtained by these firms.
$21.6M
Medical Malpractice
A 47-year-old Miami nurse with breast cancer was misdiagnosed by over eight doctors over the course of a year. By the time a correct diagnosis was made, the breast cancer was advanced, leading to aggressive and debilitating treatment.
$5.1M
Medical Malpractice
A woman admitted to the hospital for low sodium (hyponatremia) suffered irreversible brain damage (central pontine myelinolysis - CPM) due to a medication error. A dangerous dose and rate of saline solution were administered because of a default setting in the hospital’s medication administration computer system.
$4M
Medical Malpractice
A young woman's cervical cancer went undetected for several years due to negligence by technicians and pathologists reviewing her annual pap smears. By the time it was diagnosed, the cancer was in an advanced stage, requiring a total hysterectomy, chemotherapy, and radiation.
$1.4M
Medical Malpractice
A young man who recently had knee surgery presented to his primary care physician and hospital with symptoms of a deep vein thrombosis (DVT). His complaints were attributed to anxiety, and the DVT was not properly diagnosed or treated, leading to a pulmonary embolism and his death.


