Jon Boesen is the founder of Boesen Law, a Denver-area personal injury firm with over 30 years of legal experience. He represents clients in automobile accidents, workers' compensation, and pharmaceutical litigation cases.
Guest profiles are assembled through a combination of automated analysis and editorial review of show appearances, public records and other available sources. As these profiles are a work in progress, some details may be inaccurate, outdated or incomplete. If you are this guest or notice something that needs correcting, please let us know below and we will update the profile promptly.
Jon Boesen is the founder and principal attorney of Boesen Law, LLC, a personal injury law firm established in 2013 and headquartered in Greenwood Village, Colorado. With more than 30 years of legal practice in civil litigation, Boesen has built a firm that now employs nine attorneys across multiple Colorado locations, including offices in Denver and Greenwood Village.
Boesen graduated from The University of Oklahoma College of Law in 1989 and was admitted to the Colorado bar that same year. His practice focuses on representing individuals and families who have suffered serious injuries or losses due to the negligence of others. His areas of expertise include automobile accidents, wrongful death, medical malpractice, workers' compensation, Social Security disability, dog bites, slip and fall injuries, construction accidents, and product liability.
Throughout his career, Boesen has successfully recovered millions of dollars on behalf of clients. He was recognized as a Super Lawyers selection in 2023, an honor awarded to a select number of accomplished attorneys in each state based on peer recognition and professional achievement. His firm has become particularly active in pharmaceutical litigation, including cases involving GLP-1 weight loss medications such as Ozempic and Wegovy.
Boesen is a longtime sponsor and frequent guest on the Kim Monson Show, appearing over 40 times since November 2023. His segments cover practical legal advice for accident victims, workers' compensation rights, insurance coverage guidance, and pharmaceutical accountability. He is known for providing accessible explanations of complex legal matters and emphasizing the importance of prompt action after injuries.
Kim Monson with Lauren Fix on salvage yards and mobility, Dana Busch on a Colorado Boulevard bus plan, and Priscilla Rahn on school choice. June 23, 2026.
“If there's witnesses, get names, get phone numbers, get statements, because it will potentially be a game changer down the road because insurance companies are in it to make money.”
Dr. Jill Vecchio on the health toll of AI data centers, Nathan Worcester on the lapse of FISA spy powers, and Jon Boesen on injury claims. June 16, 2026.
“Settling early, settling for any amount early is a mistake.”
Peter Bernegger on shifting ballot totals, Daniel Turner on data centers and energy, Priscilla Rahn on Excalibur Academy, Jon Boesen on workers' comp. Kim Monson Show, June 2, 2026.
“But the most important thing someone that's injured on the job needs to do as soon as something happens is report the injury.”
Special government deals, the energy land grab with Virginia Macha, and student-visa fraud with Nathan Worcester on the Kim Monson Show for May 19, 2026.
“When it's a construction zone and when it's dusk, all three factors matter.”
Constitutional expert previews Supreme Court term, the legislature wraps a radical session, and prairie landowners fight a transmission line. May 12, 2026.
“A stay in legal terms is a court-ordered pause or stopping of the proceeding.”
Excalibur Classical Academy launches, the SPLC's hate group racket unravels, and a Kansas transmission line tests property rights. May 5, 2026.
“Distracted driving is the number one cause of accidents. And it's what I hear all the time. And on the highway, especially with as crowded as the highways have become, staying focused, attentive, watching what's in front of you, it's impossible to do what you need to do if you are looking down at a phone or, God forbid, you know, trying to text while you're driving.”
Maricopa County's election power fight, Colorado's HB26-1322 therapist-liability bill, and the GOP chair race. April 28, 2026.
“When I hear no, I immediately kind of cringe because I know there's a strong likelihood that the insurance company that is insuring the at-fault driver, the driver that caused the accident, is going to say they're not accepting responsibility, they're not accepting liability, because there was no determination of fault made by the police.”
Kevin Lundberg on SB26-135's assault on TABOR, Jon Boesen on GLP-1 litigation, Ryan Morgan on Iran's enrichment stance, and Dave Willson for AG. April 21, 2026.
“Folks have a right to know if there are problems with a drug or a pharmaceutical, and they should know right away. And that's the rub. Big pharma's making so much money, they start hearing bad reports. Nope, they don't want that to affect sales.”
Rob Natelson on the Chiles v. Salazar ruling, open primaries, and John Eastman; Kevin Lundberg on Protect Kids Colorado; Jon Boesen on injury deadlines. April 14, 2026.
“If someone is injured by a government employee in the state of Colorado, you have 182 days to put the government entity, the agency, or the employee that works for them on notice that you intend to pursue a claim. And if you don't do that, you're out of luck.”
Colorado's budget shortfall drives tax raids as Trump targets mail-in voting and a small business owner battles $60,000 in property taxes. April 7, 2026.
“One of the biggest mistakes we see people make that have been injured on the job is not timely reporting the injury.”
CEO Jay Davidson examines government coercion vs. enlightenment and Fed monetary policy. Pastor Stephen Chappell discusses offensive faith. March 31, 2026.
“We are not a mill firm. We are not a firm that relies on volume. We take a limited number of clients, and it allows us to give the time and attention to the individual client that they deserve.”
Kevin Lundberg analyzes Protect Kids Colorado's ballot victory, election integrity, and JeffCo's transgender sports defiance on the March 24, 2026 show.
“Insurance adjusters are very skilled and gifted at getting people to say things that are going to hurt them down the road. So don't give a recorded statement.”
Brad Beck and Nathan Worcester tackle education tax credits and primary election results, with Jon Boesen on AI scams, on the Kim Monson Show, March 17, 2026.
“I am seeing more sophisticated scams, use of AI in a very devious, just horrible way. I think the AI programs are capturing our voices to keep them for future use in a scam.”
TABOR threats, county commissioner elections, sanctuary policy costs, and constitutional property rights on March 10, 2026.
“If an agent doesn't bring up that you should have uninsured motorist, underinsured motorist coverage in the state of Colorado today, you need to find a new agent.”
Horror publisher Tom Monteleone shares his cancel culture story while former Sen. Kevin Lundberg exposes concerning Colorado legislation. March 3, 2026.
“With the COVID debacle, call it what you will, I call it the plandemic, a lot of people lost faith in the medical industry. They lost a lot of credibility by just going with the endorsement of big pharma, and unfortunately our government, that this was something that needed to be done.”
Kevin Lundberg and Megan Burke rally Protect Kids Colorado's final petition push while Rob Natelson marks his 40th Supreme Court citation on February 10, 2026.
“Insurance companies are always looking for a way to minimize, and sometimes they go way over the line.”
Protect Kids Colorado enters its final push, HB26-1001 threatens local zoning, and Mark Tapscott exposes organized ICE protests. February 3, 2026.
“If you're a W-2 employee, you pay every paycheck into the system so that this benefit is there for you if, and I hope none of the listeners need this, but if you need it and can't work because of injury, because of illness, cancer, anything that keeps you from working, you can apply for Social Security disability insurance benefits.”
Kim Monson talks with Kevin Lundberg about Protect Kids Colorado's ballot petition push, Jon Boesen on deradicalization, and Kevin Conrad on January 27, 2026.
“Open up just that little bitty, tiny crack where they can hear something that maybe from their past rings true and brings them just a little bit out of the dark.”
1:02:09 – 1:08:41
Segment
No episodes match your search.
Membership
Join the Conversation. Choose Your Membership.
Three tiers named for the homes of our Founding Fathers. Discussion spaces, town halls, classes, and direct access to Kim. Starting at $50/year.