Injured by a Booth Collapse at a Las Vegas Convention? Your Legal Options

Las Vegas hosts thousands of conventions every year, from CES to SEMA to the World of Concrete. These events feature massive, multi-story booth structures that are essentially temporary buildings assembled in days. While the environment feels corporate and safe, the risks are identical to a construction site. If a display wall falls, a lighting truss collapses, or a raised floor gives way, the injuries can be catastrophic.

If you or a family member was injured by a booth collapse while working at or attending a Las Vegas convention—or even walking near a booth when it failed—you likely assume workers’ compensation through your employer is the only option.

This is often incorrect.

Most convention displays are not built by your employer. They are designed, shipped, and assembled by third-party companies. When these contractors are negligent, you can file a personal injury lawsuit against them—bypassing the workers’ compensation cap entirely. Below, we explain who can be held liable, the specific evidence that proves negligence in trade show cases (including documents most people don’t know to request), and the critical deadlines you face.

Why You Can Sue the Setup Company (Not Just File Workers’ Comp)

Trade show injuries fall under premises liability law—the principle that property owners and those who control a space are responsible for keeping it safe. But convention centers are unique: multiple parties share control, and workers’ compensation rules complicate who you can sue.

Workers’ compensation is an “exclusive remedy” in Nevada (NRS 616A.020). It pays your medical bills and a portion of lost wages, but it blocks you from suing your own boss for negligence.

However, the company that built the booth next to you—or even the company that built your booth—is a third party. They do not employ you, which means they do not have immunity. If their negligence caused the collapse, you can hold them fully accountable in civil court. This allows you to bypass the workers’ compensation cap and sue for full damages, including:

  • Full lost wages (not just the percentage workers’ comp pays).
  • Pain and suffering (never covered by workers’ comp).
  • Loss of future earning capacity.
  • Full medical costs.

The value of any claim depends on specific factors: the severity of your injuries, length of recovery, any permanent impairment, documented lost income, and the strength of evidence identifying the negligent contractor. Cases involving serious injuries with clear third-party liability and preserved evidence typically result in higher compensation than soft-tissue injuries where the responsible party is unclear.

Common Liability Scenarios

  • Rigging Failure: At venues like the Las Vegas Convention Center, overhead signs and lighting trusses weighing thousands of pounds must be secured to the facility’s rigging grid. If a “rigger” fails to calculate the load correctly, the entire structure can fall.
  • Structural Instability: Multi-story booths require specific engineering to support human weight. If a contractor skips a support beam to save time, and the second floor collapses, they are liable.
  • Unsecured Displays: Tall video walls or product displays must be anchored to prevent tipping. If a “freestanding” wall falls on an attendee, it is often a violation of setup safety protocols.

These scenarios are hypothetical examples for illustrative purposes. Actual liability depends on the specific facts of each case.

What if You Were Partially at Fault?

Nevada follows a “modified comparative negligence” rule (NRS 41.141). You can still recover damages if you were less than 50% responsible for your injury. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault.

For example, if you leaned on a display that was improperly anchored and were found 20% at fault, you could still recover 80% of your damages from the contractor who failed to secure it properly.

If an Insurance Company Contacts You

After a trade show injury, you may be contacted by multiple insurance companies: the exhibitor’s insurer, the contractor’s insurer, or the venue’s risk management team. They may seem helpful, but their goal is to minimize what they pay.

Protect yourself:

  • Do not provide a recorded statement without consulting an attorney. Adjusters are trained to ask questions that can be used against you later.
  • Do not accept an early settlement offer. Initial offers rarely reflect the full value of your claim, especially before you know the extent of your injuries.
  • Do not sign broad medical release authorizations. Insurers may use these to search for pre-existing conditions to reduce your compensation.

You are not required to speak with any insurer. You can direct all communication to your attorney.

Do You Have a Case? Key Factors

Not every trade show injury leads to a successful lawsuit against a contractor. Here are factors that strengthen or complicate your claim:

Signs you may have a strong third-party claim:

  • The structure that injured you was built by a company other than your employer
  • The collapse involved rigging, overhead elements, or multi-story construction
  • You have documentation: photos, incident report, witness contacts, or shipping labels identifying the builder
  • Engineering drawings were required but may not have been followed
  • The setup company cut corners on time or materials

Factors that may complicate your claim:

  • You were an employee of the company that built the booth (workers’ comp may be your only option)
  • No documentation exists and the show has already ended
  • The hazard was obvious and clearly marked
  • You waited weeks or months before seeking medical attention

Having complicating factors does not automatically bar recovery. Nevada’s comparative negligence rule allows claims even when you share some fault. But the more documentation you have—especially evidence identifying the third-party contractor—the stronger your position.

Evidence That Proves Booth Collapse Negligence

Proving negligence in a convention center requires understanding the complex paperwork of the trade show industry. We do not just look at photos of the wreckage; we subpoena the specific documents that prove who was responsible.

  1. The EAC Form (Exhibitor Appointed Contractor)

Every exhibitor who hires an outside builder must file an EAC form with the show management.

  • The Evidence: This document identifies exactly which third-party company was authorized to work in that booth space.
  • The Argument: It eliminates the “blame game” where the venue blames the exhibitor, and the exhibitor blames the venue. The EAC form pinpoints the specific contractor responsible for the build.
  1. Stamped Engineering Drawings

For booths with multi-story structures, complex rigging, or overhead loads that exceed facility thresholds, venues like the Las Vegas Convention Center require plans stamped by a licensed structural engineer registered in Nevada. The LVCVA Fire Prevention Office reviews these submissions before installation.

  • The Evidence: We compare the approved engineering plans with photos of the actual setup.
  • The Argument: Did the builder skip a bolt? Did they use a cheaper, lighter truss than what the engineer specified? Any deviation from the stamped drawing is strong evidence of negligence.
  1. Fire Safety Permits (LVCVA Fire Prevention Office)

Multi-level booths and exhibits with covered areas exceeding 300 square feet typically require permits and inspection by the LVCVA Fire Prevention Office. Covered or enclosed areas may also require battery-operated smoke detectors regardless of size.

  • The Evidence: We check if the permit was obtained and if the mandatory fire watch or sprinkler systems were installed.
  • The Argument: Failure to obtain a required safety permit is often “negligence per se,” meaning the violation itself proves the breach of duty.

Nevada’s Deadline: Why Trade Show Evidence Disappears Fast

Trade shows are temporary. The evidence of your injury—the broken truss, the unanchored wall—is often dismantled and shipped out of state within 48 hours of the show closing.

Furthermore, Nevada generally requires you to file a personal injury lawsuit within two years of the accident (NRS 11.190). Waiting allows critical evidence to be lost or destroyed.

What to Do After a Trade Show Booth Collapse

  1. Report to Show Management: Do not just tell the booth staff. Find a representative from the show management (e.g., CES, SEMA) or venue security (LVCC, Sands/Venetian) and file a formal incident report.
  2. Get the “Bill of Lading”: If a display fell, try to get a photo of the shipping labels or crates. This often identifies the display house or builder.
  3. Identify Witnesses: In a busy hall, witnesses disappear quickly. Get business cards from anyone who saw the collapse.
  4. Seek Medical Care: Go to a hospital or urgent care immediately. Convention center first aid stations are for minor issues; you need a full medical record of your injuries.

Get a Free Case Evaluation

Convention booth collapses are legally complex because the liable party is often a contractor based in another state, the evidence ships out within 48 hours, and multiple companies point fingers at each other. Whether you or a family member was injured at the Las Vegas Convention Center, Mandalay Bay, the Venetian Expo, or any Nevada trade show venue, you need an attorney who understands EAC forms, engineering requirements, and how to secure evidence before it disappears.

With 40+ years of experience handling personal injury claims, Jack Bernstein knows how to cut through the trade show industry’s liability maze—identifying the responsible contractors, obtaining critical documentation, and building cases before evidence is dismantled and shipped across the country.

Contact Jack Bernstein Injury Lawyers for a free consultation: (702) 633-3333.

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