First, pharmacy malpractice cases are rare, although the ones with publicity don't make you think so.
Second, most malpractice cases are handled by corporate or your employer's lawyers - depending on who you work for, they handle gobs of lawsuits & pharmacy is just one (grocery stores handle everything from falls to codefendants in cases of contaminated food, "drug chains" handle merchandise failure - ie...cheap jewerly from china that caused lead poisoning, hospitals do all sorts of health related death & injury) in addition - they all do worker's comp. So - there are lots and lots of lawyers & you need to be good in not just pharmacy malpractice.
The attorney's I know who do ONLY pharmacy malpractice are the ones who either are expert witnesses (they know the pharmacy & can speak the "speak") or who handle the civil end of a malpractice case - when you alone are sued - not you & and your employer or your employer coverage has maxed out & the plaintiff wants to go after everything.
When I look at where the attorney's went to school who are in the insurance company I buy my malpractice from - I don't see Harvard, Yale, Boalt of Hastings......but, then - I don't know law school either. And, I don't even know if those guys would even handle a case - if its a slam dunk loss - it would be pawned off on someone else.
I dunno - there are plenty of night school lawyers out there - do you think you'd win hands down if one of them went up against you in a malpractice? No - if they had a case - even a night school lawyer could take it.