Mike Glisson on Advocating for the Injured in Illinois and Missouri
Photo Courtesy: Glisson Law

Mike Glisson on Advocating for the Injured in Illinois and Missouri

Most people never expect to need a personal injury attorney. A morning commute, a routine surgery, an ordinary afternoon on the job, then a phone call or a hospital room rearranges everything. The injury is only the first part of the disruption. What follows is often a slower, quieter crisis: missed work, mounting bills, insurance adjusters with scripts to follow, and a family trying to figure out what comes next.

That second crisis is where attorneys like Mike Glisson of Glisson Law spend their professional lives. Based in Alton, Illinois, with a second office in Springfield, Glisson has practiced plaintiff-side injury law for more than 30 years across Illinois and Missouri. His work centers on a simple premise: when someone is hurt because of another party’s conduct, the legal system should give that person a real voice, not a settlement letter designed to make the file go away.

Why Plaintiff-Side Injury Law?

Glisson built his career on the plaintiff side by choice. After earning his Juris Doctor from Valparaiso University School of Law in 1996, he was admitted to the Illinois bar that same year and the Missouri bar in 1998. He has since been admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, and he argued before the Illinois Supreme Court in 2007.

Credentials aside, what shaped his orientation toward injury victims is older than law school. He grew up in Springfield, Illinois, one of six children in a working-class household, and saw early on how a single bad event, a layoff, a hospital stay, an accident, could destabilize a family for years. That memory still informs how he reads a case file.

“At the end of the day, this work is about people, not files, not claims, not case numbers. People,” he says of the firm’s approach.

What Sets a Mission-Driven Personal Injury Practice Apart?

There is a meaningful difference between transactional legal work and advocacy-driven representation. Transactional work processes a claim. Advocacy treats the injured person as the center of the case, not its byproduct. Glisson Law is built around the second model, and that has practical consequences for how the firm runs.

Clients are not handed off to paralegals after intake. Phone calls are returned. Strategy is explained in plain language. When a deposition is coming, the client knows what to expect and why it matters. Glisson describes this as a baseline expectation, not a selling point. People who are recovering from serious injuries are already exhausted, he notes; the last thing they need is a law firm that adds to the uncertainty.

That philosophy is reflected in the matters the firm takes on: personal injury litigation, wrongful death claims, auto and trucking accidents, medical malpractice, workers’ compensation, insurance disputes, and nursing home negligence cases. Each category involves a different procedural path, but the underlying experience for the client tends to be the same. Someone is hurt. Someone else, often an insurer, is deciding what their loss is worth. Glisson’s role is to make sure that the calculation is done in the best interests of the client.

How the Firm Approaches Investigation and Litigation

Strong injury cases are built early. By the time a claim reaches negotiation, the evidence has either been preserved or it has not, the medical record has either been documented thoroughly or it has not, and the witnesses have either been interviewed while memories are fresh or they have been forgotten. Glisson’s approach treats the first weeks of a case as the most important.

That means working closely with medical experts to map the full scope of an injury, not just its immediate symptoms. A back injury after a trucking accident is not only a back injury. It is a question of future surgeries, lost earning capacity, household tasks the client can no longer perform, and the long arc of recovery. The firm’s investigations are built to capture that fuller picture before settlement conversations begin.

It also means being trial-ready from day one. Insurance carriers track which firms try cases and which do not, and they price their offers accordingly. A firm known for settling quickly tends to receive lower offers. A firm known for taking strong cases to verdict tends to receive serious ones. Glisson’s appearances before the Illinois Appellate Court, the Seventh Circuit, and the Illinois Supreme Court signal a posture of preparation that insurers read clearly.

The Imbalance Injury Victims Face

Personal injury law is one of the few areas of practice where the playing field starts visibly tilted. On one side is an individual who has just been hurt, often for the first time in their life, with no familiarity with claim procedures, statutes of limitations, or the way medical bills become liens. On the other side is a corporate insurer with decades of institutional experience and an internal protocol for keeping payouts low.

Adjusters are not villains in this story, but they are not neutral either. Their job is to evaluate a claim against a set of internal benchmarks. Without a lawyer, an injured person is negotiating against those benchmarks alone, usually while still in active treatment. The result tends to be early offers that look reasonable in isolation and undervalue the long-term picture when examined closely.

Glisson views the attorney’s role partly as a translator and partly as a counterweight. The translator’s job is to help the client understand what the insurer is doing and why. The counterweight’s job is to make sure the carrier knows it is no longer dealing with someone who can be pressured into accepting less than the case is worth.

Community Roots in Alton and Beyond

The firm’s civic involvement is local and ongoing. Glisson serves on the board of the Alton Crisis Food Center and previously served on the board of the Southwestern Illinois chapter of the American Red Cross. He has mentored through Big Brothers Big Sisters, coached youth sports through the YMCA, and contributed time to local school mentoring programs and volunteer housing and food pantry projects. The firm maintains a commitment to monthly charitable giving.

That activity is connected to the practice in a direct way. Many of the firm’s clients come from the same communities in which the attorneys volunteer. People injured in trucking accidents on Illinois interstates, families dealing with the aftermath of a nursing home incident, workers hurt at job sites in southwestern Illinois, these are neighbors before they are clients. Glisson is also a past president of the Alton-Wood River Bar Association and a member of the American Association for Justice and the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association.

Looking Ahead in Illinois Personal Injury Law

The field is changing. Trucking litigation has grown more technical as electronic logging devices, telematics data, and onboard camera footage have entered routine evidence. Medical malpractice claims increasingly turn on electronic health record metadata. Nursing home cases now rely heavily on staffing records and digital incident logs that did not exist a generation ago. The attorneys who handle these cases well are the ones willing to keep learning the tools.

Glisson Law carries forward a proud six-decade tradition of serving individuals and families across Illinois and Missouri, and the next stretch of work, in Glisson’s telling, is about deepening the firm’s investment in those tools while holding onto the part of the practice that does not change: the conversation with a client who has just had something taken from them, and the careful job of helping put as much of it back as the law allows.

“Our mission has never been just about winning cases,” Glisson says. “It’s about making a lasting difference for the people and communities that trust us.”

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and editorial purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. Readers should consult a qualified attorney or appropriate professional regarding their specific circumstances. Any references to legal matters, case types, professional background, or community involvement are based on information provided for publication and should not be interpreted as a guarantee of outcomes or results.

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