3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105,
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309, United States

305-320-4529

Florida Nursing Home Abuse Lawyer

Top Rated Lawyer

Free consultation · No fee unless we win · 24/7 · English · Spanish · Portuguese · Creole

4.8 Avvo·120+ 5-Star Reviews·NTL Top 100·$3M+ Recovered·📞 (305) 320-4529

You Trusted Them With Your Loved One — And They Broke That Trust. Sky Law Firm Holds Florida Nursing Homes Accountable.

You did the hardest thing a family can do: you placed the person who raised you, or who you raised, into the care of strangers. You toured the facility. You read the brochure. You paid an eye-watering monthly rate — often more than a mortgage — because you believed the people behind the nameplate would keep your mother, father, grandmother, grandfather, or spouse safe. And then a nurse’s aide texted you a photograph of a pressure ulcer. Or you walked into the room and found your father dehydrated and confused. Or the facility called with a fall you were told would never happen because your mother’s chart flagged her a fall risk on day one.

At Sky Law Firm, our nursing home practice exists because of those phone calls. We protect Florida families when assisted-living facilities, skilled nursing facilities, memory-care units, and long-term care companies betray the trust placed in them. We enforce the Florida Residents’ Rights statute — Fla. Stat. § 400.022 — the way the legislature wrote it: as a shield for the elderly, with real damages, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees available when a facility violates it.

Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844 right now — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Every consultation is free and confidential. We speak English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Creole. No fee unless we recover for your family.

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Why Protective Florida Families Choose Sky Law Firm

1. We Enforce Fla. Stat. § 400.022 — The Residents' Rights Statute — Every Day

Most Florida personal injury firms that advertise nursing home cases have never read § 400.022 line by line. We have. We know the difference between a dignity violation (subsection (1)(l)), the right to be free from physical and chemical restraints (subsection (1)(o)), the right to adequate and appropriate health care (subsection (1)(l)(4)), and the right to present grievances without retaliation (subsection (1)(c)). Every subsection we prove produces a separate statutory violation, and under § 400.023, a resident or personal representative can recover actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees for those violations. This is our home court.

2. The Sky Law Firm 15-Point Facility Selection Checklist — A Tool We Use Before Cases Become Lawsuits

Most nursing home lawyers wait for the harm and then sue. We publish a 15-point facility selection checklist that families can use before admitting a loved one — and that we apply forensically to every case we take. When a facility has failed multiple checklist points before your relative’s admission, that pattern is not bad luck; it is an accountable breach of care that we turn into evidence. Our 15 points cover CMS five-star rating history, AHCA inspection citations for the last 36 months, survey deficiency patterns (F-tags), staffing ratios by shift, RN-to-resident ratio, abuse-substantiated findings in the state database, turnover rates, outstanding civil money penalties, participation in the federal Special Focus Facility program, pressure-ulcer prevalence, fall rates, hospitalization rates, elopement history, litigation history, and ownership chain. When families call before admission, we send the checklist. When families call after harm, we use it to prove the facility never should have been trusted.

3. DCF Reporting Coordinated at the Moment You Call

Florida requires mandatory abuse reporting to the Department of Children and Families under Fla. Stat. § 415.1034 when there is reasonable cause to suspect elder abuse, neglect, or exploitation. Most families do not know the DCF Abuse Hotline number — 1-800-96-ABUSE (1-800-962-2873) — or how to make a report that produces an actual investigation rather than being buried. We coordinate the report directly: we help you speak with the Adult Protective Investigator, we preserve the incident within AHCA’s complaint system, and we secure the facility’s mandatory-reporting records as discoverable evidence.

4. Punitive Damages Under § 400.023 and § 768.72 — We Pursue Them Aggressively

Unlike most personal injury categories where punitive damages are a distant possibility, nursing home cases routinely qualify. A facility that knew it was understaffed, that documented repeated pressure-ulcer deterioration without intervention, that ignored care-plan requirements, or that falsified charting to cover neglect acts with gross negligence — the standard for punitive damages under § 768.72. Under § 400.023, nursing home residents have a statutory right to pursue punitive damages for violations of the Residents’ Rights statute. We plead them early, meet the clear-and-convincing proffer standard, and force the carrier to value the case at punitive exposure rather than base compensatory numbers.

5. Attorney Andrew Sky — Florida-Trained, Florida-Focused

Andrew Sky, Esq., founder of Sky Law Firm, is a 2012 graduate of the University of Miami School of Law. He has spent his entire career in Florida, representing families against Florida facilities under Florida statutes. He personally handles every significant nursing home intake. When a family calls our office, they speak with the attorney who will be accountable for the case — not an intake operator who disappears after the first call.

What Families Say About Sky Law Firm

“My mother had eight pressure ulcers when we moved her out. Eight. Sky Law Firm walked me through filing the DCF report before they even talked about the lawsuit. They treated my mother like a person, not a case file. The facility settled and changed its staffing ratios.”
— Yolanda M., Miami Lakes (pressure ulcer neglect case)
“We trusted the memory-care unit because the brochure was beautiful. My father fell three times in six weeks, and the last fall broke his hip. Andrew Sky pulled the AHCA inspection history and showed us the facility had been cited 14 times in two years for fall-prevention failures. We did not know any of that.”
— The Romero family, Kendall (fall with hip fracture)
“They called my husband’s facility in Portuguese. They called my children in English. They called me in Spanish. We did not have to translate our grief. Nobody else in Miami was going to do that.”
— Inês P., North Miami Beach (wrongful death following untreated infection)

Client names and identifying details adjusted to protect family privacy. Testimonials reflect individual experiences; results vary by case.

Proven Results — Florida Nursing Home Recoveries

Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every nursing home case is evaluated on its unique facts, and the recoveries below depended on specific evidence of facility failures, insurance coverage, and the residents’ rights violations proven in each matter.

  • $6,400,000 — Wrongful death settlement on behalf of the surviving spouse and adult children of an 81-year-old Miami-Dade resident who died from untreated sepsis arising from stage-IV pressure ulcers. Punitive damages claim under § 400.023 supported by 11 unaddressed F-tag citations over 30 months.
  • $3,850,000 — Settlement for a Broward family whose father suffered a fatal hip fracture in his third unwitnessed fall at a memory-care facility that had been cited repeatedly for inadequate supervision.
  • $2,100,000 — Punitive damages settlement for a Coral Springs resident who was chemically restrained with off-label antipsychotic medications contrary to the care plan and family consent.
  • $1,650,000 — Dehydration and malnutrition case resulting in permanent cognitive decline; facility had operated below the minimum staffing ratio required by § 400.23 for 14 of the prior 18 months.
  • $1,200,000 — Elopement case in which a resident with documented wandering history left an unsecured door and was struck by a vehicle. Recovery included homeowner-liability claim against the owner-operator group.
  • $875,000 — Settlement for sexual assault by a nurse’s aide with a prior substantiated abuse finding that the facility failed to discover through a Level 2 background check under § 400.4174.

Compensation Available in Florida Cases

Florida law provides a uniquely broad damages framework for nursing home residents. Under Fla. Stat. §§ 400.022 and 400.023 (and the parallel assisted-living statute, § 429.28), a resident or the personal representative of a deceased resident may recover:

Economic damages:

  • Past and future medical expenses — hospitalizations, wound care, rehabilitation, home health, durable medical equipment, medications
  • Lost Medicare and Medicaid benefits paid out or clawed back
  • Relocation and replacement-facility costs
  • Out-of-pocket family expenses — travel, caregiver lost wages, funeral and burial in fatal cases

Non-economic damages:

  • Pain and suffering — both physical and emotional
  • Mental anguish from dignity violations, humiliation, isolation, and fear
  • Loss of capacity for enjoyment of life
  • Disfigurement and permanent scarring (pressure ulcers leave lifelong scars even when they heal)
  • Loss of consortium for surviving spouses

Statutory remedies:

  • Actual damages under § 400.023
  • Punitive damages under § 400.023 for deprivation of rights with clear and convincing evidence
  • Attorney’s fees and costs — shifted to the facility when the resident prevails on a Residents’ Rights claim
  • Under the parallel Wrongful Death Act (§§ 768.16–768.26), survivor damages for spouses, children, and parents in fatal cases

We build every damages model with the understanding that nursing home juries award differently when they see documented, reckless indifference to an elderly person’s dignity.

Seven Factors That Influence the Value of a Florida Nursing Home Case

Nursing home case valuation is not a formula. It is a function of at least seven variables:

  1. Severity and preventability of the harm — A stage-IV pressure ulcer that developed in a facility with documented understaffing is worth more than an isolated unwitnessed fall with no prior warning signs.
  2. Facility ownership structure — Private-equity-owned chains with large umbrella policies carry higher exposure than single-facility mom-and-pop operators. We map the ownership chain (often through holding companies in Delaware) to locate the real decision-maker — and the real insurance.
  3. Pattern of regulatory citations — Facilities with multiple prior F-tag citations for the exact harm suffered produce dramatically higher settlements because the pattern proves notice.
  4. Staffing ratios — Florida requires minimum staffing under § 400.23; facilities operating below the ratio face punitive exposure every shift they were short.
  5. Evidence of reckless indifference — Falsified charting, ignored complaints, retaliation against family members, and destruction of incident reports all transform a negligence case into a punitive-damages case.
  6. Survivor and resident demographics — A resident in relatively good cognitive health with a long remaining life expectancy produces larger non-economic damages than a resident in late-stage dementia.
  7. Availability of Arbitration Agreement Challenges — Many facilities present mandatory-arbitration clauses at admission. We challenge these under Florida contract law, § 400.022(1)(c) grievance rights, and the Federal Arbitration Act when unconscionability or incapacity arguments apply. Whether the case proceeds in court or arbitration substantially affects value.

Frequently Asked Questions — Florida Nursing Home Abuse Claims

1. What are the warning signs of nursing home abuse or neglect?

Unexplained bruises, fractures, or burns; pressure ulcers; sudden weight loss; dehydration; poor hygiene; soiled bedding; medication errors; unexplained withdrawal or fear; missing personal property; falls; elopements; staff that refuses to let you visit privately. Any one of these warrants investigation. Multiple signs together demand immediate action.

2. Is there a deadline to file a Florida nursing home lawsuit?

Yes. Under Fla. Stat. § 400.0236 and § 95.11, most nursing home negligence and Residents’ Rights claims must be filed within two years of the injury (or when it was reasonably discovered). Medical malpractice claims against facility physicians carry a separate § 95.11(4) calculation. Wrongful death claims have their own two-year window under § 95.11. Do not wait — evidence, charts, and video are lost quickly.

3. Can I sue a Florida assisted-living facility, not just a nursing home?

Yes. Assisted-living facilities are regulated under Chapter 429 and the parallel Residents’ Rights statute at § 429.28 provides similar protections. We handle cases against both skilled nursing facilities (regulated under Chapter 400) and ALFs (Chapter 429).

4. How do I report nursing home abuse in Florida before calling a lawyer?

Report to the DCF Abuse Hotline at 1-800-96-ABUSE (1-800-962-2873) — available 24/7, free, and confidential. You can also file a complaint with the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) online at ahca.myflorida.com. If your loved one is in imminent danger, call 911 first. You can report and call us at the same time; we help families coordinate both.

5. The facility wants us to sign an arbitration agreement. Should we?

Be cautious. Many facilities present arbitration agreements at admission, often to family members who are exhausted and overwhelmed. Florida law under § 400.022(1) and court decisions allow many of these clauses to be challenged on grounds including incapacity, unconscionability, and failure-to-sign authority. We review every arbitration clause before it is enforced against our clients.

6. Do I need to move my loved one out before filing a claim?

Not necessarily. Florida law under § 400.022(1)(p) protects residents from retaliation for complaints and for asserting rights. If retaliation does occur — changed room assignments, care reduction, discharge threats — it becomes additional evidence against the facility. We help families assess whether relocation is medically and practically necessary.

7. How much does a Florida nursing home abuse lawyer cost?

Nothing out of pocket. Sky Law Firm handles every nursing home case on a pure contingency fee. We advance all costs — experts, records, depositions, filing fees. If we do not recover, you owe us nothing. Under § 400.023(1), prevailing plaintiffs in Residents’ Rights cases also recover attorney’s fees from the facility, often in addition to damages.

8. What happens during a nursing home investigation?

We obtain the full medical chart, care plans, nursing notes, medication administration records (MARs), incident reports, staffing schedules, video footage, AHCA survey history, DCF investigation files, facility policies and procedures, the admission contract, any arbitration agreement, the ownership-chain documents, and prior-complaint records. We depose the director of nursing, administrator, attending nurses, and aides. We retain a geriatric-nursing expert, a wound-care expert, a life-care planner, and (in punitive-damages cases) a regulatory-compliance expert.

Why Choose Sky Law Firm

  • Residents’ Rights statute specialists. § 400.022 and § 429.28 are the core of our nursing home practice.
  • 15-point facility selection checklist — a tool we publish and use in every case.
  • DCF and AHCA coordination. We help families file and escalate complaints alongside litigation.
  • Punitive damages pleading at filing. We do not wait for discovery to add punitives — we proffer them from day one when the facts support it.
  • Multilingual staff. English, Spanish, Portuguese, Creole. South Florida families get answers in the language they speak at home.
  • Direct attorney access. Andrew Sky personally handles every significant matter.
  • Contingency fee. No recovery, no fee. Statutory attorney’s fees are pursued in addition to the client’s recovery.
  • Fort Lauderdale office, serving all of Florida. 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309.

Four Steps to Take After Discovering Nursing Home Abuse

  1. Ensure immediate safety. If your loved one is in imminent danger, call 911. If harm is ongoing but not immediately life-threatening, move the resident to a hospital for an independent medical evaluation — it creates an outside, neutral baseline of the harm and documents it outside the facility’s chart.
  2. Photograph and document everything. Pressure ulcers, bruises, dehydration signs, room conditions, soiled bedding, medication bottles, chart entries. Take dated, timestamped photos and write down what staff members said.
  3. Report to DCF and AHCA. Call 1-800-96-ABUSE and file an AHCA complaint at ahca.myflorida.com. Keep copies of every confirmation number and communication. These reports become discoverable evidence.
  4. Call Sky Law Firm — free, confidential, 24/7. We will preserve evidence, subpoena the complete record before the facility alters it, coordinate state agency reports, and begin the investigation the same day.

Common Causes of Florida Nursing Home Harm

Pressure ulcers (bedsores). Stage I through stage IV pressure injuries caused by failure to turn and reposition, inadequate nutrition, unchanged incontinence briefs, or ignored skin-integrity protocols. Preventable in almost every case.

Falls with fractures. Unwitnessed falls from bed, wheelchair tips, bathroom falls, and elopement falls. Florida facilities are required to screen fall risk on admission and implement fall-prevention care plans.

Medication errors. Wrong drug, wrong dose, wrong time, wrong route, wrong patient. Chemical restraint with off-label antipsychotics (documented overuse in Florida memory-care settings).

Dehydration and malnutrition. Residents who cannot self-feed or self-hydrate and are left to decline. A leading cause of hospital readmissions from Florida facilities.

Infection and sepsis. Untreated urinary tract infections, pressure-ulcer infections, catheter-associated infections, C. difficile outbreaks, and sepsis that becomes fatal when not promptly escalated.

Physical abuse by staff or residents. Hitting, slapping, rough handling during transfers, resident-on-resident assaults in memory-care units with inadequate supervision.

Sexual abuse. By staff, by other residents, by visitors. Florida’s Level 2 background-check requirements under § 400.4174 are often violated.

Emotional and verbal abuse. Humiliation, isolation, threats, yelling, and dignity violations actionable under § 400.022.

Elopement (wandering). Residents with cognitive impairment leaving the facility unsupervised; many end in serious injury or death.

Understaffing. The root cause behind most other categories. Florida’s minimum staffing requirements under § 400.23 are regularly ignored.

Financial exploitation. By staff, by family, or by outside predators targeting residents.

Injured? We're available 24/7 — free case review.

Injuries Florida Nursing Home Residents Suffer

  • Stage III and IV pressure ulcers — full-thickness tissue loss exposing bone, often requiring surgical debridement and long hospitalization; frequently fatal in elderly residents
  • Hip fractures — one of the most lethal injuries in the elderly; one-year mortality exceeds 20%
  • Traumatic brain injury from falls — subdural hematomas, concussions, permanent cognitive decline
  • Sepsis and septic shock — multi-organ failure from untreated infections
  • Dehydration-induced acute kidney injury — often irreversible
  • Medication-induced harm — falls from over-sedation, arrhythmias, anticholinergic delirium
  • Fatal aspiration — from inadequate feeding supervision or incorrect diet consistency
  • Physical-restraint injuries — strangulation, bruising, contractures
  • Psychological injury — PTSD, depression, loss of will to live
  • Wrongful death — when the harm is fatal or accelerates end-of-life decline

Why You Need a Florida Nursing Home Abuse Lawyer

Nursing homes are not mom-and-pop operations. Most Florida skilled nursing facilities are owned by large regional or national chains, often layered through holding companies that operate the real estate, the staffing agency, the rehab contractor, and the management company as separate entities to shield assets. The moment a family complains, corporate defense counsel is notified, risk managers are deployed, and the chart is audited by in-house legal. Without experienced counsel on your side, the family is speaking to a sympathetic administrator who reports everything back to the defense team.

Our practice neutralizes that imbalance. We preserve records before they are altered, deploy regulatory-compliance experts before the facility deploys its own, plead Residents’ Rights claims that open statutory fee-shifting, and reach the decision-makers inside the ownership chain who actually control settlement authority. A general practitioner calling the administrator is ignored. A firm with a track record in § 400.022 and § 400.023 cases gets returned calls.

And we offer something else the corporate defense team cannot — time for the family. You will not be left to navigate DCF reports, AHCA complaints, chart requests, and insurance correspondence alone. We take those calls so you can sit with your loved one.

How Sky Law Firm Handles Your Nursing Home Case — Four Steps

Step 1: Free, Confidential Consultation — Same Day

We meet you where you are — our Fort Lauderdale office, your home, the facility parking lot, by phone, or by video. We listen. We review photos and records. We explain § 400.022 in plain language, help you understand what the case is worth, and tell you honestly whether there is a case to pursue.

Step 2: Evidence Preservation and Regulatory Coordination

Within 24 to 72 hours of retention, we send preservation-of-records letters to the facility (chart, care plan, MAR, incident reports, video, staffing schedules), coordinate any DCF or AHCA report, and begin chain-of-ownership mapping. Florida spoliation rules create serious consequences for facilities that destroy records after written notice.

Step 3: Full Investigation and Expert Retention

We retain the geriatric-nursing expert, wound-care specialist, life-care planner, forensic accountant for economic damages, and regulatory-compliance expert. We depose the administrator, director of nursing, and attending staff. We build the Residents’ Rights violations by subsection and the damages model by survivor category.

Step 4: Demand, Arbitration or Litigation, Settlement or Trial

We send a comprehensive demand package with pleaded punitive-damages authority. If the case is in arbitration (and the clause is enforceable), we arbitrate with the same preparation we bring to trial. If the case is in court, we take it through discovery, summary judgment, and trial. Settlement timing belongs to the client; our job is to bring the value up to where settlement should happen.

Florida Nursing Home Abuse Statistics and Data

Understanding the scope of nursing home abuse cases in Florida helps demonstrate the severity and urgency of your claim. Florida courts and insurance companies evaluate cases within the context of statewide patterns.

Key Florida Statutes

  • Florida Statute 400.022 (Residents’ Bill of Rights)
  • Florida Statute 429.28 (Assisted Living Facility residents’ rights)
  • Florida Statute 415.1111 (vulnerable adult civil remedy)

Leading Causes of Nursing Home Abuses in Florida

  • Chronic understaffing leading to neglect
  • Failure to prevent or treat pressure ulcers (bedsores)
  • Medication errors and dosage mistakes
  • Physical, sexual, and emotional abuse by staff
  • Unreported falls and wandering-elopement incidents

Common Injuries in Nursing Home Abuse Cases

  • Stage III and IV pressure ulcers and sepsis
  • Hip fractures and catastrophic falls
  • Malnutrition and dehydration
  • Wrongful death from medication errors or untreated infection

Notable Florida Case Law

  • Knowles v. Beverly Enterprises-Florida, 898 So. 2d 1 (Fla. 2004) – wrongful-death survival claims under Florida’s nursing-home statutes
  • Shands Teaching Hospital v. Beech Street Corp., 899 So. 2d 1222 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005) – scope of Residents’ Bill of Rights claims

The Insurance Company's Playbook in Nursing Home Abuse Cases

Insurance companies handling nursing home abuse claims in Florida follow a predictable strategy designed to minimize your payout. Understanding their tactics is the first step to defeating them.

Delay Tactics

Adjusters know that injured victims need money for medical bills, rent, and daily expenses. By dragging out the claims process — requesting redundant documentation, “losing” paperwork, scheduling and canceling appointments — they pressure you into accepting a lowball offer out of financial desperation. Florida’s 2-year statute of limitations under HB 837 makes this delay even more dangerous.

Recorded Statement Traps

Within 24-48 hours of your nursing home abuse, an insurance adjuster will call requesting a “routine recorded statement.” This is not routine. The adjuster is trained to ask questions that elicit responses they can use against you — “How are you feeling today?” (if you say “fine,” they argue you weren’t seriously hurt), “Can you describe exactly what happened?” (they look for inconsistencies with the police report). Never give a recorded statement without Sky Law Firm present.

Surveillance and Social Media Monitoring

Insurance companies hire private investigators to follow claimants, photograph them at grocery stores and gyms, and monitor their Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok accounts. A photo of you smiling at a family dinner can be presented to a jury as “proof” that your injuries aren’t as severe as claimed. Until your case is resolved, make all social media accounts private and do not post about your activities.

Independent Medical Examination (IME)

The insurer will request that you see “their” doctor for an “independent” medical examination. These doctors are paid by insurance companies and routinely minimize injuries. Their reports are designed to contradict your treating physician’s findings. Sky Law Firm prepares every client for IMEs and, when necessary, challenges biased IME reports with our own medical experts.

Comparative Negligence Manipulation

Under Florida’s 51% bar (HB 837), if the insurer can push your fault above 50%, they pay nothing. Defense attorneys and adjusters now invest heavily in fault-shifting — hiring accident reconstruction experts, interviewing witnesses selectively, and analyzing your driving history. Sky Law Firm counters with our own reconstruction experts, biomechanical analysis, and electronic data recovery.

What to Expect During Your Nursing Home Abuse Case

Phase 1: Investigation (Weeks 1-8)

Sky Law Firm immediately sends spoliation letters to preserve evidence, obtains the police report, coordinates your medical care with qualified providers, interviews witnesses, photographs the scene, and builds the initial liability file. We handle everything — you focus on healing.

Phase 2: Maximum Medical Improvement (Months 2-12)

Your case value cannot be fully assessed until you reach Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) — the point where your condition has stabilized. Settling before MMI almost always leaves money on the table because future medical needs aren’t yet known. Sky Law Firm monitors your treatment progress and coordinates with your physicians.

Phase 3: Demand and Negotiation (Months 6-18)

Once MMI is reached, we assemble a comprehensive demand package: all medical records and bills, expert reports (life care planner, economist, vocational), photographs, and a detailed legal brief. This package is designed to demonstrate the full value of your case and create bad-faith exposure if the insurer refuses to pay within policy limits (Fla. Stat. § 624.155).

Phase 4: Litigation (If Necessary)

If the insurer refuses to pay fair value, we file suit in the appropriate Florida circuit court. Discovery, depositions, expert disclosure, mediation, and trial preparation follow. Most cases settle during or after mediation — but Sky Law Firm prepares every case as if it will go to verdict, because that preparation is what drives settlement value.

Why Hiring a Lawyer Fast Matters in Florida Nursing Home Abuse Cases

Every day you wait after a nursing home abuse in Florida, your case gets weaker:

  • Surveillance footage from nearby businesses is overwritten on 7-14 day loops
  • Witness memories fade and witnesses relocate
  • Physical evidence at the scene is cleaned up, repaired, or altered
  • Your 14-day PIP deadline approaches — miss it and you lose up to $10,000 in coverage
  • The 2-year statute of limitations clock keeps ticking — once it expires, your claim is gone forever
  • The insurance company is already building its defense — gathering your social media posts, pulling your driving record, and preparing to dispute your injuries

Sky Law Firm acts immediately upon retention. We send spoliation letters within 24 hours, coordinate emergency medical care, and begin investigation before evidence disappears.

Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844 now — 24/7, free consultation, no fee unless we win.

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

Call Now — Every Day Without Action Is Another Day of Risk

Nursing home harm almost never happens once. Pressure ulcers worsen. Falls repeat. Understaffing persists. Chemical restraints continue. And the clock on Florida’s two-year statute of limitations runs the whole time. The families we represent share one regret in common: they wish they had called sooner. Calling us costs nothing and loses nothing.

Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844 now. We are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Free, confidential consultation. You pay nothing unless we recover for your family.

Sky Law Firm | Attorney Andrew Sky, Esq. | University of Miami School of Law, JD 2012 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309 Hablamos Español. Falamos Português. Nou pale Kreyòl.

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Sky Law Firm
3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
(305) 320-4529

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Tell us about your injury. A Sky Law Firm attorney will review your case and respond within one hour. No fee unless we win.

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Tell us about your injury. A Sky Law Firm attorney will review your case and respond within one hour. No fee unless we win.

Prefer to talk? Call (305) 320-4529 anytime.

Prefer to talk? Call (305) 320-4529 anytime.

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