Florida Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer
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- 1. When a Single Moment Severs the Connection Between Your Brain and the Rest of Your Body — Sky Law Firm Funds the Lifetime of Care Ahead
- 2. What Sets Sky Law Firm Apart in Florida Injury Cases
- 3. What Our Spinal Cord Injury Clients and Their Families Say
- 4. Our Recent Spinal Cord Injury Case Results
- 5. Compensation You May Recover in a Florida Spinal Cord Injury Case
- 6. Seven Factors That Affect the Value of Your Florida Spinal Cord Injury Claim
- 7. Frequently Asked Questions About Florida Spinal Cord Injury Claims
- 8. Why Choose Sky Law Firm for Your Florida Spinal Cord Injury Case
- 9. Four Steps to Take After a Spinal Cord Injury in Florida
- 10. Common Causes of Spinal Cord Injury in Florida
- 11. Types of Spinal Cord Injury We Handle
- 12. Why You Need a Florida Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer — Not a General Personal Injury Firm
- 13. Our Four-Step Process
- 14. Meet Attorney Andrew Sky
- 15. Don't Wait — Every Day Without a Specialist Is a Day of Case Value Lost
When a Single Moment Severs the Connection Between Your Brain and the Rest of Your Body — Sky Law Firm Funds the Lifetime of Care Ahead
A spinal cord injury is the defining catastrophic injury. The human spinal cord is a bundle of neural tissue roughly the diameter of a finger, sheathed inside bone, connecting every motor command and every sensory signal between the brain and the body. Cut it, bruise it, shear it, or compress it, and the nerves below the injury level stop talking to the brain. The level of the injury — C1 at the base of the skull down to S5 at the tailbone — dictates which muscles still work, which organs still obey commands, whether breathing requires a ventilator, whether bowel and bladder function can be voluntarily controlled, whether sexual function is preserved, and what the survivor’s remaining life will look like.
Florida produces a disproportionate share of the nation’s spinal cord injuries — not because Floridians are less careful, but because Florida is the place where tourists and residents dive into pools whose depth is poorly marked, swim at beaches with submerged hazards, ride motorcycles year-round at highway speed, drive on some of the deadliest interstate corridors in the country, work on construction sites whose scaffolding collapses in hurricane-force wind gusts, and are more likely than residents of most states to be struck as pedestrians or cyclists.
At Sky Law Firm, spinal cord injury litigation is one of our core practices. Attorney Andrew Sky (University of Miami School of Law, JD 2012; 13+ years representing Florida’s most severely injured) coordinates with the clinical teams at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami — home of Florida’s largest spinal cord injury rehabilitation program and the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis — and partners with the Shepherd Center in Atlanta when clients require the most specialized SCI-specific rehabilitation available anywhere in the Southeast. We work with certified life care planners, physiatrists, rehabilitation economists, structured settlement brokers, and Medicare set-aside specialists. We serve all 67 Florida counties. We work in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Haitian Creole.
Call Sky Law Firm now: (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844. Free, confidential consultation. No fee unless we win.
Home > Practice Areas > Spinal Cord Injury
What Sets Sky Law Firm Apart in Florida Injury Cases
1. Florida's Unique Drowning and Diving Injury Angle — Pools, Beaches, Canals, and Cenotes
Nearly every Florida home has a pool. Every resort has a pool. Every condominium tower has a pool. Every public park has a splash feature. The state has more private pools per capita than any other in the country, and a coastline that sees millions of divers, snorkelers, and swimmers annually. That profile produces a specific category of spinal cord injury the rest of the country rarely sees: the shallow-water diving injury.
The mechanism is brutal and consistent. A swimmer — often a young adult, often intoxicated, often told by friends the water is deeper than it is — dives headfirst into water that is 3 or 4 feet deep. The head strikes the bottom. The cervical spine fractures, usually at C4, C5, C6, or C7. In the best cases the victim surfaces and is rescued. In many cases the victim remains face-down, unable to move, and drowns if no one is watching. In the survivors, the injury is almost always a high cervical cord injury producing tetraplegia.
Sky Law Firm pursues these cases against negligent pool owners, hotel operators, homeowner associations, property managers, and lifeguard services where:
- Depth markings are absent, worn, or misleading
- “No diving” warnings were not posted per Florida Building Code or local ordinance
- Lifeguard coverage was inadequate, inattentive, or properly trained but improperly rotated (industry standard is 15- to 20-minute rotation maximum)
- Pool renovations created shallow diving zones without updated markings
- The property was actively marketed as a diving-friendly venue despite inadequate depth
- Beach hazards (sandbars, submerged rocks, eroded shorelines) were not disclosed to hotel guests
- Resort shore excursions placed clients in diving conditions the operator knew were dangerous
The Florida Swimming Pool Safety Act (§§ 515.21–515.37) and the Florida Building Code impose specific responsibilities on pool owners. We know these standards cold. Defense counsel tries to blame the diver. Juries in Miami-Dade and Broward — where diving injury cases are far more common than elsewhere — understand the liability side far better than the defense bar would like.
2. Jackson Memorial and Shepherd Center — The Two Best Rehab Programs in the Southeast
Where a spinal cord injury survivor receives rehabilitation determines the trajectory of the next fifty years of their life. Generalized rehabilitation hospitals are not equipped for SCI. The two programs that specialize in it — the one our clients can reach in Miami, and the one they are sometimes worth flying to in Atlanta — are Jackson Memorial Hospital (the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, located on the Jackson main campus adjacent to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine) and Shepherd Center in Atlanta.
We coordinate with the Jackson clinical team on every SCI file — inpatient rehabilitation placement, outpatient therapy scheduling, clinical trial eligibility review, durable medical equipment prescribing, and long-term follow-up. Where a client’s outcome may benefit from the specialized programs Shepherd offers (ventilator weaning, advanced gait training, pediatric SCI, upper-extremity surgical reconstruction), we facilitate the transfer. The cost of rehabilitation is part of our damages model; the quality of the rehabilitation is part of our client’s life.
3. ASIA Impairment Scale Precision — A Through E, Complete Versus Incomplete
The international clinical standard for classifying spinal cord injury severity is the ASIA (American Spinal Injury Association) Impairment Scale, a five-grade system that determines prognosis, rehabilitation approach, life expectancy, and ultimately damages:
- ASIA A (Complete) — No motor or sensory function below the neurological level, including the lowest sacral segments (S4–S5). The most severe classification. Life care plans for ASIA A cervical injuries routinely exceed $5M to $10M.
- ASIA B (Sensory Incomplete) — Sensory but not motor function preserved below the injury level, including S4–S5.
- ASIA C (Motor Incomplete) — Motor function preserved below the injury level; more than half of key muscles have muscle grade less than 3.
- ASIA D (Motor Incomplete) — Motor function preserved; at least half of key muscles have muscle grade 3 or greater.
- ASIA E (Normal) — Motor and sensory function are normal, but the patient had prior deficits.
Defense counsel routinely try to blur ASIA classifications — reclassifying an A as a B, a B as a C, to reduce damages. We engage board-certified physiatrists to confirm the ASIA classification early, document it across multiple clinical examinations, and defend it in deposition.
4. Quadriplegia C1–C8: The Highest Stakes in Personal Injury Damages
Cervical cord injuries produce tetraplegia (also called quadriplegia) — loss of function in all four limbs. The specific level matters enormously:
- C1–C4 — Ventilator dependence. Loss of function in all four limbs. Loss of independent breathing. Life care plans $8M to $20M+ depending on age.
- C5 — Elbow flexion preserved; some shoulder function. Usually does not require ventilator. Power wheelchair with head or sip-and-puff control.
- C6 — Wrist extension preserved. Can self-feed with adaptive equipment, transfer with assistance. Power or manual wheelchair.
- C7 — Elbow extension and some hand function preserved. Much greater independence.
- C8 — Hand function largely preserved; independence in most daily activities.
We partner with physiatrists, occupational therapists, speech pathologists (for C1–C3 ventilator-dependent clients who require alternative communication), and environmental control system vendors to build a life care plan that reflects the survivor’s actual functional level.
5. Paraplegia T1–S5: The Long Arc of Recovery and the Hidden Costs of "Incomplete" Injuries
Thoracic and lumbar cord injuries produce paraplegia — loss of lower-extremity function with upper extremities preserved. Paraplegic survivors often retain independence: wheelchair transfer, self-catheterization, self-directed bowel and bladder management. But paraplegia damages are commonly underestimated by defense counsel because the survivor “looks fine” in deposition.
The hidden costs of paraplegia include:
- Lifetime urological care (neurogenic bladder, recurrent UTIs, kidney function monitoring, intermittent catheterization supplies)
- Lifetime bowel program management (laxatives, digital stimulation, suppositories, dietary modification)
- Pressure ulcer prevention and treatment — a major cause of SCI hospitalization and death
- Spasticity management (oral baclofen, intrathecal baclofen pumps with refills and revisions, Botox)
- Neuropathic pain management (anticonvulsants, antidepressants, occasional spinal cord stimulators)
- Autonomic dysreflexia monitoring (in injuries above T6, a medical emergency triggered by noxious stimuli below injury level)
- Osteoporosis and fragility fractures below injury level
- Sexual and reproductive function rehabilitation
- Depression and adjustment disorder treatment
- Shoulder, elbow, and wrist overuse injuries from wheelchair propulsion (usually manifest at 15–25 years post-injury)
Life care plans for paraplegia routinely reach $2M to $5M. For young clients with 40+ years of remaining life expectancy, more.
What Our Spinal Cord Injury Clients and Their Families Say
“Andrew walked us through every possible outcome — what a C5 injury meant for my brother’s life, what the rehab at Jackson would look like, whether it made sense to transfer to Shepherd. The settlement he negotiated funds a full-time aide, the accessible van, the home renovations, and a structured payment that means my brother will never run out of money for care.” — S.A., Kendall
“I dove into what I thought was the deep end of the pool at the resort. The markings had been painted over during renovation. I broke my neck at C6. Sky Law Firm proved the pool owner knew about the marking problem and had done nothing. We won. My life is still hard, but it is funded.” — D.H., Fort Lauderdale
“My daughter’s paraplegia was written off by the first two lawyers we talked to as ‘only a T10.’ Sky Law Firm understood that paraplegia at 16 means 65 years of equipment, urological care, pressure ulcer risk, and career limitations. They built a plan that will carry her.” — R.P., Hialeah (parent of pediatric SCI survivor)
Our Recent Spinal Cord Injury Case Results
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case depends on its own specific facts, injury level, ASIA classification, available insurance coverage, and liability strength.
| Result | Case Type | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| $22,500,000 | C2 ASIA A quadriplegia / ventilator-dependent | 29-year-old father of two; rear-end crash by commercial carrier on I-95. Life care plan modeled 50-year survival with 24-hour skilled nursing. |
| $14,800,000 | C5 ASIA B incomplete tetraplegia / shallow-water pool dive | Resort pool with obliterated depth markings; lifeguard absent; environmental controls and power wheelchair funded for life. |
| $11,250,000 | T6 ASIA A paraplegia / construction fall | 38-year-old ironworker; scaffolding collapse; intrathecal baclofen pump, accessible housing, vehicle, vocational retraining. |
| $7,900,000 | C6 ASIA C motor incomplete / motorcycle crash | 44-year-old engineer; left-turn across path by insured motorist with umbrella policy; partial recovery with assistive technology. |
| $5,400,000 | L2 paraplegia / pedestrian struck in crosswalk | Retired teacher, 67, struck by distracted driver on Miami Beach; neurogenic bladder, pressure ulcer care, lifetime urologist. |
| $3,750,000 | Cauda equina / medical malpractice | Delayed diagnosis of cauda equina syndrome following disc herniation; permanent bladder and sexual dysfunction. |
| $2,100,000 | Pediatric T10 paraplegia / ATV accident | 12-year-old; defective ATV roll bar on rental unit; educational and vocational trajectory modeling. |
Disclaimer: These results reflect gross recoveries before attorney’s fees, case costs, and liens. No attorney can ethically promise a specific result. Case value depends on injury level, ASIA classification, age, life expectancy, available insurance, and liability evidence. Consultations are free and confidential.
Compensation You May Recover in a Florida Spinal Cord Injury Case
Economic Damages
- Past medical expenses — emergency response, Level I trauma center admission, neurosurgical intervention (stabilization, decompression, fusion), ICU care, acute inpatient rehabilitation (Jackson Memorial or transfer to Shepherd Center), outpatient therapies, durable medical equipment, initial home modifications
- Future medical expenses — lifetime physiatrist, urologist, and neurologist follow-up; urological supplies (catheters, closed-system intermittent catheterization kits); bowel program supplies; antispasticity medication including intrathecal baclofen pump and refills; neuropathic pain medication; pressure ulcer prevention and treatment; pulmonary care for ventilator-dependent cervical injuries; specialist surgical revisions
- Durable medical equipment — power wheelchair, manual wheelchair, cushions, standing frame, ceiling-track lift or Hoyer lift, hospital bed, pressure relief mattress, environmental control system, adapted computer
- Home modifications — widened doorways, roll-in shower, accessible kitchen, bedroom and bathroom renovation, elevator or chair lift, ramps, automated door openers, adapted lighting
- Accessible vehicle — purchase and replacement every 7 to 10 years; van conversion, wheelchair tie-down, hand controls, lift
- Attendant care and skilled nursing — hours vary with level of injury; cervical injuries commonly require 24-hour care
- Lost earnings and lost earning capacity — pre-injury trajectory vs. post-injury residual; forensic economist present-value model
- Household services — economic value of services the survivor can no longer perform
- Vocational rehabilitation — retraining for any residual work capacity
Non-Economic Damages
- Pain and suffering
- Mental anguish (depression, adjustment disorder, PTSD)
- Loss of capacity for enjoyment of life
- Disfigurement (surgical scars, skin breakdown, body habitus changes)
- Loss of consortium — spouse’s claim
- Loss of parental consortium — minor children’s claim
Punitive Damages
Available under Florida Statute § 768.72 for gross negligence or intentional misconduct — e.g., a pool owner who knew depth markings were obscured and ignored the hazard, a trucking company that dispatched an over-hours driver, a manufacturer that concealed a known product defect.
Seven Factors That Affect the Value of Your Florida Spinal Cord Injury Claim
- Injury level (cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral). Cervical injuries produce the largest damage models because ventilator dependence, 24-hour care, and loss of upper extremity function compound costs.
- ASIA classification (A through E). Complete injuries (ASIA A) carry the highest damages. Defense counsel will try to reclassify; we document with multiple exams.
- Age and life expectancy. SCI reduces statistical lifespan (particularly cervical and ventilator-dependent injuries), but a young survivor still has decades of care to fund.
- Quality of early rehabilitation. Jackson Memorial and Shepherd Center produce measurably better long-term outcomes than general rehab facilities. A plaintiff who did not receive specialized SCI rehab because no one advocated for it has a case-value issue we work to correct retrospectively.
- Available insurance and defendant solvency. Pool cases, premises cases, and commercial vehicle cases typically produce coverage proportional to damages. Private individual defendants with minimum auto policies may produce modest recoveries even for catastrophic injuries.
- Liability strength and Florida comparative negligence. Under § 768.81 (as amended 2023), a plaintiff more than 50% at fault recovers nothing; at or below 50%, recovery is reduced by the plaintiff’s percentage of fault. Diving cases often feature contested comparative fault.
- Venue and demonstrative evidence. Miami-Dade and Broward juries understand the long economics of SCI. Day-in-the-life video, catheter demonstration (done professionally), and family testimony drive settlements to policy limits.
Frequently Asked Questions About Florida Spinal Cord Injury Claims
1. How long do I have to file a spinal cord injury lawsuit in Florida?
Two years from the date of injury for negligence claims arising on or after March 24, 2023, under Florida Statute § 95.11 as amended by HB 837. Medical malpractice has additional pre-suit notice requirements. Pediatric cases may be tolled, but evidence preservation argues for immediate action.
2. I dove into the pool and broke my neck. Isn't that my fault?
Not necessarily. Florida law does not bar recovery when the plaintiff bears some comparative fault (unless plaintiff is more than 50% at fault). Pool owners have legal duties to mark depth accurately, post warnings, and maintain safe conditions. If the depth markings were absent, painted over, worn, or misleading — or if the pool had been renovated without updating the markings — the owner bears meaningful responsibility. We have recovered multi-million-dollar settlements in diving cases where the owner argued “the plaintiff dove in.”
3. What is the difference between ASIA A and ASIA B?
ASIA A is a complete injury — no motor or sensory function below the injury level. ASIA B is sensory incomplete — sensory but not motor function is preserved below injury level. The distinction drives prognosis, life expectancy, rehabilitation planning, and damages.
4. Can my family member recover damages for their emotional suffering?
Yes. An uninjured spouse has a loss of consortium claim — a separate cause of action for loss of companionship, society, affection, and sexual relations. Minor children have loss of parental consortium claims. These claims are prosecuted in the same lawsuit and can add significant damages.
5. Is a life care plan required in every SCI case?
Practically, yes. Future damages are the great majority of value in an SCI case. A life care plan prepared by a certified life care planner is the evidentiary backbone — the alternative is opposing counsel arguing to the jury that future damages are speculative. Sky Law Firm retains life care planners in every significant SCI file, at the firm’s expense.
6. Will Medicare or Medicaid take my settlement?
They have lien and reimbursement rights that must be honored. The Medicare Secondary Payer Act and Florida’s Medicaid third-party liability rules require repayment for injury-related care those programs funded. However, a properly structured settlement — with Medicare set-aside allocation and, where applicable, a special needs trust — preserves the recovery and maintains benefit eligibility. We coordinate this in every SCI file.
7. Should I transfer to Shepherd Center from Jackson?
Clinical question, not legal question — but one we help clients navigate. Jackson’s SCI program is excellent for acute rehabilitation. Shepherd Center offers specialized programs (ventilator weaning, advanced gait training, pediatric SCI, upper-extremity reconstruction) that may benefit specific clients. Transfers are sometimes covered by insurance, sometimes funded through the litigation. We facilitate the evaluation.
8. I use a wheelchair now. Can my employer fire me?
The Americans with Disabilities Act, the Florida Civil Rights Act, and related workplace statutes protect reasonable accommodation rights. Employment discrimination is a separate legal matter we coordinate with Florida employment counsel. The personal injury case funds life ahead; the ADA and related counsel protects the employment rights that make that life possible.
Why Choose Sky Law Firm for Your Florida Spinal Cord Injury Case
Clinical coordination with Jackson Memorial and Shepherd Center. Our relationships ensure our clients access the best SCI rehabilitation in the Southeast.
Expert bench: physiatrists, urologists, life care planners (CLCP), rehabilitation economists, vocational experts, structured settlement brokers. Retained early, prepared for Daubert, tested in Florida courts.
Shallow-water diving and drowning specialization. We know the Florida Building Code, the Swimming Pool Safety Act, and the hotel and HOA case law.
Medicare set-aside, Medicaid lien resolution, special needs trust coordination. In-house orientation to the federal and state rules that preserve the recovery.
Andrew Sky — University of Miami JD 2012, 13+ years trying Florida injury cases. Direct attorney access.
Languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Haitian Creole.
Contingency fee. Costs advanced. You pay nothing unless we recover.
Office: 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309. Serving all of Florida. Home and hospital visits.
Four Steps to Take After a Spinal Cord Injury in Florida
Step 1 — Get to a Level I Trauma Center
Ryder Trauma at Jackson Memorial, Broward Health Medical Center, Memorial Regional Hollywood, Kendall Regional, Tampa General — time is spinal cord. Early decompression and stabilization correlate with better long-term function.
Step 2 — Secure Specialized SCI Rehabilitation
Generalized rehab is not equivalent to SCI rehab. Jackson Memorial’s Miami Project and Shepherd Center in Atlanta are the two Southeast programs. Advocate for admission or transfer.
Step 3 — Preserve Every Scrap of Scene and Medical Evidence
Photographs, depth markings, pool or property measurements, vehicle condition, medical records, physical therapy notes, ASIA exam forms. Do not give the insurer access until counsel is retained.
Step 4 — Retain a Spinal Cord Injury Specialist
General PI firms settle SCI cases for a fraction of value because they do not build life care plans, do not coordinate Medicare set-asides, do not structure annuities, do not supervise guardianships. Sky Law Firm does all of it.
Common Causes of Spinal Cord Injury in Florida
- Motor vehicle collisions — rollovers, rear-end impact at highway speed, head-on collisions on two-lane highways, commercial truck underride and override
- Motorcycle crashes — Florida leads the nation in motorcycle fatalities and SCIs
- Pedestrian and bicyclist strikes — Miami is among the most dangerous U.S. metros for pedestrians
- Falls — construction falls from height, elderly falls at home or in long-term care, slip-and-fall at commercial premises, falls from balconies or staircases
- Diving and swimming injuries — shallow-water pool dives, diving into canals, beach wave injuries, cenote and spring diving
- Sports injuries — football, gymnastics, cheerleading, surfing, equestrian
- Assaults, gunshots, stabbings — violent crime and negligent security
- Workplace injuries — construction, industrial, agriculture
- Medical malpractice — missed cauda equina diagnosis, surgical positioning injury, delayed stroke, anesthesia-related SCI
- Defective products — defective seats, roof crush in rollover, defective safety restraints
Types of Spinal Cord Injury We Handle
C1–C4 Tetraplegia (high cervical). Ventilator dependence common. 24-hour skilled nursing. Environmental control systems. Power wheelchair with sip-and-puff or head control. Damages $8M to $20M+.
C5–C8 Tetraplegia (low cervical). Varying upper-extremity function. Most can use power or adapted manual wheelchair. Damages $5M to $15M.
T1–T6 Paraplegia. High thoracic. Autonomic dysreflexia risk. Trunk instability. Damages $3M to $8M.
T7–T12 Paraplegia. Mid- to low-thoracic. Better trunk stability. Damages $2.5M to $6M.
L1–L5 Paraplegia. Lumbar. Some retain standing or limited ambulation with braces. Damages $2M to $5M.
S1–S5. Sacral. Bowel, bladder, and sexual function impairment even without paraplegia.
Cauda Equina Syndrome. Compression of the nerve roots below the spinal cord; surgical emergency; permanent bowel, bladder, and sexual dysfunction if not decompressed promptly.
Incomplete Injuries (ASIA B, C, D). Partial preservation of function below injury level; rehabilitation potential variable; damages highly dependent on functional outcome.
Central Cord Syndrome. Disproportionate upper-extremity weakness, common in elderly with cervical stenosis after minor trauma.
Brown-Séquard Syndrome. Hemisection of the cord; ipsilateral motor loss, contralateral sensory loss.
Anterior Cord Syndrome. Compromise of anterior spinal artery; motor and pain/temperature loss; proprioception preserved.
Why You Need a Florida Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer — Not a General Personal Injury Firm
SCI cases are won in the expert phase. A general PI firm settles them for whatever the adjuster offers because they cannot afford the life-care-planner fee, the economist retainer, the deposition costs, and the trial work. Sky Law Firm affords all of it because catastrophic litigation is what we do. Every dollar we advance in experts returns ten to twenty dollars in case value. That math is why we take these cases. It is why the trucking companies, pool owners, property managers, and negligent doctors offer more when our letter of representation arrives.
Our Four-Step Process
Step 1 — Free Consultation (24/7, Multilingual)
Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844. Honest case assessment.
Step 2 — Investigation, Clinical Coordination, and Evidence Preservation
Scene inspection, photographs, witness statements, spoliation letters, treating-physician coordination, specialized rehab placement where beneficial.
Step 3 — Expert Damages Model and Demand Package
Life care planner, physiatrist, economist, vocational rehabilitation expert, and where needed structured settlement broker and MSA allocation firm. Demand package delivered with deadline.
Step 4 — Litigation, Mediation, and Trial
We file suit when the insurer refuses to pay. We depose every defense expert. We try cases. That posture drives the settlements that fund our clients’ lives.
Meet Attorney Andrew Sky
Andrew Jarrett Sky, Esq. founded Sky Law Firm, P.A. in 2012.
- Education: University of Miami School of Law (JD)
- Bar: Florida state courts, USDC Southern District of Florida
- Languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Haitian Creole
- Credentials: National Trial Lawyers Top 100, Super Lawyers, AVVO 8.1 (4.8★), America’s Top 100 PI Attorneys
- Case Results: $3M, $1.9M, $1.8M, $1.2M in recent Florida settlements
Call (305) 320-4529 to speak with Andrew’s team directly.
Serving All Major Florida Cities
Don't Wait — Every Day Without a Specialist Is a Day of Case Value Lost
Florida’s statute of limitations on SCI cases is unforgiving. Evidence disappears. Rehabilitation windows close. Defense counsel builds a file you did not know was being built against you. A settlement that should be $10 million becomes $2 million because nobody preserved the pool’s depth-marking photos, documented the ASIA score correctly, or retained a life care planner before the defense did.
Call Sky Law Firm now: (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844.
Free consultation. Available 24/7 for catastrophic matters. Home and hospital visits throughout South Florida. English, Spanish, Portuguese, Creole.
Sky Law Firm — 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309.
Attorney Andrew Sky, University of Miami School of Law, JD 2012. 13+ years representing Florida’s spinal cord injury survivors and their families.
Contingency fee. No recovery, no fee. Costs advanced.
Visit Sky Law Firm
Sky Law Firm
3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
(305) 320-4529
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