The Bowling Law Firm
1615 Poydras Street, Suite 1050, New Orleans, LA 70112, New Orleans, LA 70112
About The Bowling Law Firm
The Bowling Law Firm represents individuals in personal injury and medical malpractice cases across Louisiana and Mississippi. Established in 1994, the firm handles complex claims including pharmacy errors, car accidents, catastrophic injuries, and wrongful death. Its four attorneys have secured significant verdicts and settlements, including multi-million dollar recoveries for clients. David A. Bowling is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and the American College of Trial Lawyers. The firm emphasizes its deep medical knowledge in all injury cases.
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.
$130M
Medical Malpractice, Birth Injury
Baby suffered brain damage and cerebral palsy due to lack of oxygen during a medical crisis after a renal scan, which the mother alleged was mishandled by medical staff.
$56M
Medical Malpractice, Spinal Cord Injury
Woman became quadriplegic after spinal surgery due to a fractured bone causing a spinal cord contusion, which doctors allegedly failed to properly diagnose and treat post-surgery.
$53M
Medical Malpractice, Birth Injury, Brain Damage
Jury awarded $53 million to a mother and her 12-year-old son for brain damage caused by medical malpractice during birth, where doctors allegedly ignored fetal discomfort and failed to monitor heart rate, leading to hypoxia.
$50M
Medical Malpractice, Birth Injury
Child suffered debilitating birth injury during delivery, leading to brain damage and cerebral palsy. Physician ordered Pitocin despite dangerous heart rate decelerations, and a non-emergent Cesarean section was made too late.
$42M
Medical Malpractice, Birth Injury
Parents of a disabled boy were awarded $42 million after improper use of forceps during delivery caused skull fractures, brain bleeding, and permanent brain damage to the child.
$29.5M
Medical Malpractice, Wrongful Death
Woman died after an allergic reaction to contrast dye during a CT scan due to a doctor's negligence in failing to properly treat her anaphylactic shock with epinephrine.