Connecticut applies the Daubert standard for the admissibility of expert opinion testimony. Connecticut adopted Daubert in State v. Porter; collateral source rule modified by §52-225a.
Economic damages framework
Economic damages in Connecticut are generally recoverable in personal injury, wrongful death, medical malpractice, product liability, and commercial matters. The recoverable categories typically include past and future lost earnings, lost earning capacity, lost employer-provided fringe benefits, lost household services, and the present value of reasonable and necessary future medical and attendant care.
Methodology that travels
Dr. Pettingill builds his reports around the same methodology in every jurisdiction: U.S. government data sources, peer-reviewed forensic economic literature, and transparent reporting tied to the underlying record. That methodology has survived Daubert and Frye-equivalent challenges across 29 states and the US Virgin Islands — including Connecticut.
Working with Connecticut counsel
Whether the matter is venued in Connecticut state court or in the federal district court for Connecticut, the engagement process is the same: an initial inquiry and conflicts check, a scope conversation, a written engagement letter, a Rule 26-compliant report, and where required deposition and trial testimony.