Founder and Lead Counsel
About Mr. Dudensing
As the founder and lead counsel at Dudensing Law, Edward P. Dudensing specializes in representing plaintiffs in elder abuse cases, with a particular focus on neglect and abuse that takes place in assisted living facilities and nursing homes. He is widely recognized as one of the nation’s most successful and knowledgeable elder abuse attorneys.
Based in California, Mr. Dudensing serves clients across the state, including Sacramento, the San Francisco Bay Area, the Santa Barbara, and Los Angeles.
His ability to navigate the intricacies of elder law and his relentless pursuit of justice have solidified his standing as a leader in the field. During his 23+ year career dedicated to compassionately representing victims of elder abuse and their families, Mr. Dudensing has successfully brought cases against some of California’s largest assisted living facilities, nursing homes, and healthcare conglomerates, securing well over $250+ million in recoveries on behalf of his clients.
He has achieved multiple significant elder abuse jury verdicts, including a $29.1 million verdict in 2010, a $42.5 million verdict in 2019, and a $30.9 million verdict in 2023. Most notably, in March 2026, a Sacramento County jury awarded $110 million against Colony Capital, the publicly traded Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), and Formation Capital, the private equity investment firm that oversaw Greenhaven Estates. The verdict is the largest elder abuse verdict against an assisted living facility in California history. The case involved Mildred Hernandez, a 100-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s dementia who wandered from the facility in the middle of the night and died of hypothermia.
Also in 2026, his legal team secured a $15.75 million total jury verdict in a case involving a senior named Ruby Evans who suffered severe neglect at Windsor Vallejo Care Center and developed devastating pressure sores as a result.
In 2025, Mr. Dudensing negotiated more than $25 million in resolutions, continuing an exceptional string of results that reflects both legal skill and an unwavering commitment to some of California’s most vulnerable residents. The previous year, Mr. Dudensing secured several large resolutions for his clients, totaling nearly $20 million in recoveries, many of which were against large, for-profit skilled nursing homes and assisted living facilities that prioritized profits over care.
Additionally, Mr. Dudensing has served as lead counsel in appellate cases that have established significant legal precedents in elder law.
In 2025, Mr. Dudensing was named to the Consumer Attorneys of California (CAOC) Board of Directors, where he is helping shape policy, guide advocacy efforts, and advance CAOC’s mission to protect the rights of consumers and vulnerable communities. Mr. Dudensing is the sole author of The Rutter Group’s Elder Abuse Litigation treatise, published in 2025, which is a defining contribution to the legal field and the first comprehensive legal guide of its kind. He is expected to publish a subsequent edition. He is also a frequent speaker at the American Association for Justice Nursing Home Litigation Group, Consumer Attorneys of California, and California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR), the state’s largest nursing home advocacy organization. He is an adjunct professor at the UC Law San Francisco (formerly Hastings), where he teaches law students about elder abuse litigation. As a member of the National Consumer Voice for Long-Term Care, CANHR, CAOC, the American Association of Justice’s Nursing Home Litigation Group, the Sacramento County Bar Association, and the State Bar of California, Mr. Dudensing is actively engaged in the legal and advocacy communities.
His legal expertise extends beyond the courtroom, where he has earned a reputation for his tenacious advocacy and has a deep understanding of the complexities surrounding elder abuse cases. Mr. Dudensing is a vocal advocate for policy reform and better enforcement of elder care regulations. In 2010, he worked alongside The Sacramento Bee to explain the labyrinthine corporate structure of nursing homes that has led to an increase in elder abuse and neglect cases. His expertise has also made him a trusted source for state and national media, including The New York Times, The Hill, The Los Angeles Times, The Sacramento Bee, The Mercury News, ABC7 San Francisco, CalMatters, Healthcare Dive, Fierce Healthcare, Daily Journal, where his commentary and op-eds have helped elevate public understanding of long-term care accountability and the consequences of deregulation. He frequently publishes blogs for attorneys and clients on his website, ensuring consistent and valuable information reaches the legal community and those seeking answers for family members.
In recognition of his work, Mr. Dudensing has been selected as a Super Lawyer from 2011 to 2026. In 2026, he was individually ranked Band 3 in the Litigation: Mainly Plaintiffs category for California by the USA Chambers Guide, and the firm was ranked Band 3 in the Litigation: Mainly Plaintiffs category for California in 2025 and 2026. Also, in 2026, he has been named an Attorney of the Year” Finalist for Law.com’s 2026 California Legal Awards, named to Lawdragon’s 2026 500 Leading Lawyers in America guide, and named to Lawdragon’s 2026 100 Managing Partners You Need to Know guide. In 2025, he was selected as a Top 100 Lawyer by the Daily Journal, received the William F. Taylor Memorial Award from the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, received the Mentorship Award from the Law.com/ALM California Legal Awards, was named a finalist for SFGate’s Best Attorneys and Best Personal Injury Attorney in the Bay Area, and was a named a finalist for “Sacramento’s Favorites” by The Sacramento Bee. Dudensing Law was recognized with several prestigious awards in 2024, including being named among the Top Boutique Law Firms by the Daily Journal, acknowledged as Top Lawyers in Sacramento by Sactown Magazine, and honored with the Distinguished Leader Award by The Recorder and Law.com. In 2023, he was awarded Advocate of the Year by the Capital City Trial Attorneys.
After graduating from law school and passing the bar in 1994, Mr. Dudensing clerked for the Honorable Robert C. Broomfield, Chief Judge of the Federal District Court in Arizona, for two years. From 1996 to 1999, he was a litigation associate at the international law firm Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. From 1999 to 2003, Mr. Dudensing was a Deputy District Attorney in Sacramento County. In that role, Mr. Dudensing first-chaired more than 50 trials to verdict. As a prosecutor, Mr. Dudensing tried cases of murder, attempted murder, rape, child molestation, and gang crimes, among many others. He also handled financial elder abuse cases, which sparked his passion for advocating for this vulnerable population.
At the University of California, Berkeley, Mr. Dudensing earned his undergraduate degree in political science, then attended law school at the University of California, Davis School of Law. At UC Davis School of Law, Mr. Dudensing graduated in the top 3% of his class and was inducted into the Order of the Coif for academic excellence. Mr. Dudensing also served as the Executive Editor of the UC Davis Law Review. Mr. Dudensing was also elected to the Order of the Barrister for his skills in oral advocacy, which included his membership on the law school’s traveling mock trial team. Following graduation, Mr. Dudensing coached the UC Davis traveling mock trial teams for many years.
Education
- University of California Davis School of Law, Juris Doctorate
- University of California, Berkeley, Bachelor of Arts, Political Science
Bar and Court Admissions
Practice Areas
- Elder Law
- Health Care Law
Honors and Awards
- Ed Dudensing: Litigation: Mainly Plaintiffs (Band 3) in California, USA Chambers Guide, 2026
- Dudensing Law: Litigation: Mainly Plaintiffs (Band 3) in California, USA Chambers Guide, 2025-2026
- Attorney of the Year Finalist, Law.com California Legal Awards, 2026
- 100 Managing Partners You Need to Know, Lawdragon, 2026
- 500 Leading Lawyers in America, Lawdragon, 2026
- Northern California, Super Lawyers, 2011-2012, 2014-2026
- William F. Taylor Memorial Award, California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, 2025
- Top 100 Lawyers, Daily Journal, 2025
- California Legal Awards 2025 Mentorship Award Winner, ALM/Law.com, 2025
- Best Attorney and Best Personal Injury Attorney in the Bay Area Finalist, SFGate, 2025
- “Sacramento’s Favorites” Finalist, The Sacramento Bee, 2025
- Top Boutique Law Firms, Daily Journal, 2024
- Top Lawyers in Sacramento, Sactown Magazine, 2024
- Distinguished Leader Award, The Recorder, Law.com, 2024
- Advocate of the Year, Capitol City Trial Lawyers Association, 2023
- Order of the Barrister for Excellence in Oral Advocacy, University of California Davis Law School
- Order of Coif for Academic Excellence, University of California Davis Law School
Professional Affiliations
- Board of Directors, Consumer Attorneys of California
- Member, State Bar of California
- Member, Sacramento County Bar Association
- Member, California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR)
- Member, American Association of Justice Nursing Home Litigation Group
- Member, The National Consumer Voice for Long-Term Care
- Adjunct Professor, UC Law San Francisco
Published Works and Professional Teaching
- The Rutter Group Civil Litigation Series, Author, Elder Abuse Litigation, 2025
- The University of California College of the Law, San Francisco (formerly Hastings), Adjunct Professor
- Lectured before the San Francisco Trial Attorneys’ Association on the subject of “Proving Elder Abuse Against Kaiser Foundation Entities” 2011
- Lecturer at the American Association for Justice’s national convention on litigating nursing home cases on the subject of “Proving Systemic Corporate Neglect.” 2010
- The University of California Davis Law Review, Executive Editor
Notable Lawsuits
- Hernandez v. Colony Capital, Inc., et al.: Jury verdict of $110 million, 2026
- Evans v. Windsor Vallejo Care Center, LLC: Jury verdict of $15.75 million, 2026
- Sam Rios, Jr., et al. v. Pine Creek Care Center, Plum Healthcare Group LLC, et al.: Jury verdict of $30.9 million, 2023
- Barbara Lovenstein, et al. v. Eskaton Fountainwood Lodge, et al.: Jury verdict of $42.5 million, largest elder abuse verdict against an assisted living facility in the history of Sacramento County, 2019
- Family and Estate of Frances Tanner v. Horizon West Healthcare, Inc. and Colonial Healthcare, Inc.: Jury verdict of $29.1 million, the largest nursing home verdict in the history of Sacramento County., 2010
Lead Appellate Counsel Work
- Valentine v. Plum Healthcare Group, LLC, 37 Cal. App. 5th 1076 (2019)
- Goldman v. Sunbridge Healthcare, LLC, 220 Cal. App. 4th 1160 (2013)
- Hutcheson v. Eskaton Fountainwood Lodge, 17 Cal. App. 5th 937 (2017)
In the Media
- Real estate investors are buying up long-term care facilities. Residents can suffer – NPR – 4/19/26
- Why loosening sedative rules in nursing homes would put vulnerable patients at serious risk – The Daily Journal – 4/13/26
- Asset manager, private equity firm must pay $110M in assisted living wrongful death judgment – McKnights Senior Living – 3/9/2026
- Family awarded $110M after dementia patient died outside Sacramento care home – The Sacramento Bee – 3/6/2026
- Litigator of the Week Runners-Up and Shout-Outs – Law.com – 3/6/2026
- Jury Delivers $110M Verdict Over Death of 100-Year-Old Resident at Sacramento Facility– Law.com/The Recorder – 3/6/2026
- Jury awards $110M in death of 100-year-old at Sacramento assisted living facility – ABC10 – 3/5/2026
- Family Gets $110 Million After 100-Year-Old Grandma Dies from Hypothermia At Care Facility– Little Things – 3/5/2026
- Former owners of Sacramento senior living facility Greenhaven Estates hit with $110M verdict – Sacramento Business Journal – 3/5/2026
- Family awarded $110M following death of 100-year-old grandmother left wandering outside her senior care facility – California Post – 3/4/2026
- Jury hits private equity, REIT owners with $110 M verdict in assisted living death – Daily Journal – 3/4/2026
- Family of 100-year-old woman who died of hypothermia outside Sacramento assisted living facility is awarded $110 million– KCRA – 3/3/2026
- How I Founded a Law Firm: ‘Take Your Time to Build Foundational Skills,’ Says Edward Dudensing of Dudensing Law – Law.com – 1/30/2026
- Sacramento Centenarian Dies of Hypothermia After Walking Out of Memory Care, Family Says – Hoodline – 1/22/26
- ‘Cold to the touch’: 100-year-old woman froze to death after ‘wandering’ outside of nursing home through unmanned exit door that ‘automatically locked’ behind her, lawsuit says – Law & Crime – 2026-1-22
- Family says 100-year-old woman with dementia wandered out, died from hypothermia in Sacramento – ABC 10 – 2026-1-21
- Familia demanda hogar de ancianos por negligencia mortal – Univision Sacramento – 2026-1-20
- The promise and peril of private equity – McKnights – 2026-12-16
- Elder abuse attorney: PE, REITs driving decline in SNF quality – McKnights – 2026-12-16
- He built a nursing home empire despite state investigations. Now, lawsuits are piling up – CalMatters – 2025-11-20
- Preparing for C-TAPP Phase 2: What California lawyers need to know – Daily Journal – 2025-10-09
- Fall River fire fuels calls for federal assisted living legislation – The Hill – 2025-07-17
- Biden administration’s nursing home staffing requirements vacated by federal judge – Fierce Healthcare – 2025-04-08
- Top prosecutor joins Dudensing Law in Sacramento, expanding elder abuse team – Daily Journal – 2025-03-20
- Dr. Oz questioned over Medicaid cuts, promises Medicare Advantage scrutiny – Fierce Healthcare – 2025-03-13
- Elder care during the Trump administration: what’s at stake (op-ed) – Daily Journal – 2025-02-18
- Top Lawyers 2024 – Sactown Magazine – 2024-11-1
- Top Boutiques 2024 – The Daily Journal – 2024-10-30
- Meet the Winners of the 2024 California Legal Awards –The Recorder – 2024-10-16
- Why litigation is necessary to hold private equity accountable for elder abuse (op-ed) – Daily Journal – 2024-09-19
- Elder Abuse Law Firm Comes to LA – LA Business Journal – 2024-09-09
- Elder abuse specialist Dudensing Law expands to Los Angeles – Daily Journal – Doug Saunder – 2024-09-05
- Local rehab center facing lawsuit over woman’s death (print edition) – Lodi News-Sentinel – Wes Bowers – 2024-08-24
- The Senate can protect the elderly by supporting nursing home staffing regulations – not overturning them (op-ed) – Healthcare Dive – 2024-07-29
- Oakland man dies from ‘reckless overmedication’ after escaping from nursing home, complaint alleges – ABC San Francisco – Stephanie Sierra – 2024-07-26
- Nursing home ‘drugged up’ 64-year-old so he couldn’t wander, CA suit says. He died – The Sacramento Bee, et. al.- Julia Marnin – 2024-07-11
- As some nursing homes cry poverty, what can be done about increased staffing requirements? – LA Times – Steve Lopez – 2024-04-28
- California needs to take ‘walkaway deaths’ and senior care oversight more seriously (op-ed) – CalMatters – 2024-03-25
- Oakland nursing home faces lawsuit alleging rape, neglect and fraud after ‘hiding problems’ – ABC San Francisco – Stephanie Sierra – 2024-03-12
- Roseville’s Pine Creek Care Center ordered to pay $30.9 million in wrongful death, elder neglect suit – Sacramento Business Journal – Emily Hamman – 2024-01-27
- Keys to a $30M, $29.1M, and $42.5M Elder Care Verdict w/ Ed Dudensing – Lawyer Minds – The Jury Thinks What? Podcast – 2023-09-01
- Securing Pre-Death Pain and Suffering in Elder Abuse Cases – The Current State of the Law (analysis) – California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform – Fall 2023
- He stayed at a Northern California nursing home then died. Why jury awarded huge verdict – Sacramento Bee – Sam Stanton – 2023-01-25
- Over 350 COVID-19 deaths expose California assisted-living homes (op-ed) – Mercury News – 2020-06-17
- Newsom: I have a responsibility to do better – CalMatters – Emily Hoeven – 2020-04-06
- The eldercare industrial complex: favoring corporations over care (op-ed) – American Society on Aging – 2020-03
- California is Facing an Elder Abuse Crisis (op-ed) – Fizz Law – No date
- California hospices face lax oversight and few rules. The sick and dying pay the price – Sacramento Bee – Elaine Chen – 2019-08-28
- Many view assisted living as just housing, not health care. That’s dangerous (op-ed) – Sacramento Bee – Ed Dudensing & Anthony Chicotel – 2019-08-21
- Eskaton prepares to challenge $42.5 million wrongful death verdict – Sacramento Business Journal – Felicia Alvarez – 2019-05-02
- Elder care giant’s CEO on $42.5 million verdict in elder abuse lawsuit: ‘Eskaton will survive’ – Sacramento Bee – Sam Stanton – 2019-04-26
- Best of the Bar honorees: Here’s the fifth group – Sacramento Business Journal – 2017-09-12
- Part 2: Who owns California’s nursing homes? – Sacramento Bee – Marjie Lundstrom & Phillip Reese – 2014-11-12
- Falsified patient records are untold story of California nursing home care – Sacramento Bee – Marjie Lundstrom – 2014-10-08
- Medicare Star Ratings Allow Nursing Homes to Game the System – New York Times – Katie Thomas – 2014-08-14
- $29 million verdict upheld against Rocklin nursing home firm (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Cynthia Hubert – 2010-07-14
- Jury orders Auburn nursing home company to pay $28 million in death (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Cynthia Hubert – 2010-05-14
- Jury awards $29.1 million in nursing home death – Associated Press – 2010-05-13
- Auburn nursing home again under scrutiny in civil trial over death (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Cynthia Hubert – 2010-05-12
- Feds grade nursing homes; New Rating System Called One Tool in Selecting a Facility (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Bobby Caina Calvan – 2008-12-19
- CPS investigation: Abuse case overwhelmed novice social worker (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Marjie Lundstrom – 2008-06-22
- CPS investigation: Despite changes, abused kids still die in Sacramento County system (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Marjie Lundstrom – 2008-06-22
- KB Home suit back on track; Appellate court sends it back for trial (archived) – Monterrey County Herald – Sukhjit Purewal – 2006-09-21
- Former CDF firefighter faces trial in arson case (archived) – Sacramento Bee – Peter Hecht – 2002-03-14
- Sacramento property manager sentenced in hate crime case (archived) – Associated Press – 2001-06-09
Speaking Engagements
- NHLG – “Commanding The Courtroom: Persuasion Techniques That Win” – 2026-03-20
- CANHR Annual Conference – “Elder Abuse Litigation: Updates/Stuff You Should Know” – 2025-11-21
- CAOC Annual Conference – “Corporate Liability: Four models of long-term care ownership, what to know about them, and how to attack them” – 2025-11-14
- Consumer Voice Annual Conference (50 Year) – “Efforts to avoid liability: Strategies for assessing corporate structure and financial viability” – 2025-11-5
- CANHR Conclave – “Hidden Games And Scary Pitfalls” – 2025-03-06
- CANHR Conclave – “CC 3345 & Punitive Damage Denominator Issues” – 2024-03-06
- CANHR Annual Conference – “Post-Mortem On Rios Trial” – 2023-11-17
- CANHR Annual Conference – “Limitations On Punitive Damages” – 2023-10-29
- Consumer Attorneys of California (CAOC) Annual Conference – “Securing Punitive Damages” – 2023-10-29
- Capitol City Trial Lawyers Association (CCTLA) – “Document Requests & Methods to Combat Defense Concealment Tactics” – 2023-08-16
- CANHR – “LRS Training Series” – 2022-03-25
- AAJ – “Champions of the Courtroom: Winning Techniques for Nursing Home Litigation Seminar” – 2019-10-25
- CAOC Annual Conference – “Getting DPH Violations Admitted” – 2020-10-25
- CANHR – “AB 1629 – Bad Deal, Bad Care” – 2019-10
- Justice.org – “Nursing Home Verdicts” – 2019-09-25
- American Association for Justice (AAJ) Nursing Home Litigation Group – “Post-Mortem on Tanner Trial” – 2014
- Debate Re Arbitration (Kim Stone as moderator)
- CAOC Annual Convention – “Effectively Using DPH Records to Prove Recklessness in Nursing Home Litigation” – 2012-11
- Kaiser, CAOC/ San Francisco Trial Lawyers Association (SFTLA) – “Choosing Between Arbitration & Trial, and Challenging Kaiser’s Arbitration Agreements” – 2011-09-19
- AAJ – “Litigating Nursing Home Cases Seminar: Proving Systemic Corporate Neglect” – 2010-09-24 to 2010-09-25