Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer — Camp Lejeune, PFAS & Mesothelioma Attorneys
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- 1. Why Choose Our Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer
- 2. Proven Results in Florida Cases
- 3. Compensation Available in a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
- 4. Factors That Influence the Value of a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
- 5. Florida Toxic Exposure FAQ
- 6. Why Work with Sky Law Firm for a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
- 7. Steps to Take in a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
- 8. Understanding the Real Compensation You Are Owed
- 9. Causes of Florida Toxic Exposure Litigation
- 10. Why Choose a Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer Who Understands the Full Procedural Map
- 11. Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyers Serving Statewide
- 12. Types of Florida Toxic Exposure Cases We Handle
- 13. Common Injuries and Diseases in Florida Cases
- 14. Why You Need a Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer
- 15. Florida Toxic Exposure Statistics and Data
- 16. The Insurance Company's Playbook in Toxic Exposure Cases
- 17. What to Expect During Your Toxic Exposure Case
- 18. Why Hiring a Lawyer Fast Matters in Florida Toxic Exposure Cases
- 19. Meet Attorney Andrew Sky
- 20. Why Wait? Start Your Case Today
Why Choose Our Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer
You served at Camp Lejeune between 1953 and 1987 and drank the water, bathed in it, cooked with it, and now — decades later — you have kidney cancer, bladder cancer, Parkinson’s disease, or a blood cancer that nobody in your family has ever had. You are a retired firefighter who put out industrial fires for thirty years with AFFF foam, and now your thyroid is gone and your PSA is climbing. You spray Roundup on your landscaping business crews and a non-Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis just came back from the oncologist. You worked in shipbuilding, pipefitting, boiler rooms, or HVAC installation in the 1970s and 1980s, and you have just been diagnosed with mesothelioma. You cut sugarcane in Belle Glade, Clewiston, or Pahokee through the 1990s, and you have been sick for years with symptoms nobody ever connected to the pesticides.
These are toxic exposure cases — sometimes called environmental torts, occupational torts, or mass exposure claims. They involve long latency periods between exposure and disease, complex causation, and specialized procedural paths. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 is its own federal statute with an administrative claim process, a filing deadline of August 10, 2024 for initial claims (though many additional claims have been filed since and certain categories remain open), and a filing horizon that extends through 2029 for qualifying plaintiffs. PFAS/AFFF claims are consolidated in MDL 2873 (D.S.C.). Roundup litigation is ongoing with individual state filings and settlements. Asbestos mesothelioma cases run through Florida state courts and asbestos trusts.
Sky Law Firm handles all of these. Attorney Andrew Sky and the toxic exposure team manage intake, exposure documentation, medical evidence, and filing into the appropriate forum. Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844 for a free, confidential consultation.
Proven Results in Florida Cases
Representative category-level outcomes. Every case is different. Past outcomes do not predict future results.
- $1.75 million — Camp Lejeune kidney cancer case. Marine veteran stationed at Camp Lejeune in the early 1970s for more than 30 cumulative days; renal cell carcinoma diagnosed in the 2010s; administrative claim and Eastern District of North Carolina filing.
- $1.2 million — AFFF firefighting foam case. Retired municipal firefighter with more than 25 years of documented AFFF exposure during training burns and structure fires; testicular cancer diagnosis; MDL 2873 filing.
- $950,000 — Roundup non-Hodgkin lymphoma case. Commercial landscaper with documented long-term glyphosate exposure; diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; state-court filing.
- $2.4 million — Mesothelioma case involving historical shipyard and industrial asbestos exposure. Resolution through combined litigation recovery and asbestos trust claims.
- $625,000 — Florida sugarcane worker pesticide exposure case. Former cane field worker with documented exposure to paraquat and organophosphates; Parkinson’s disease diagnosis; multi-defendant state-court resolution.
- $380,000 — PFAS contamination drinking water case. Homeowner with private well near an AFFF training facility; thyroid disease with elevated serum PFOS.
Compensation Available in a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
Economic damages — past medical bills (diagnostic workup, surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy, hospice), future medical expenses (oncologic surveillance, recurrence treatment, palliative care), lost wages and lost earning capacity, and out-of-pocket costs for transportation, caregiving, and alternative treatment.
Non-economic damages — pain and suffering (cancer pain, treatment side effects, fear of recurrence), mental anguish, disfigurement from surgery, and loss of enjoyment of life.
Under the Camp Lejeune Justice Act, damages are authorized for individuals who meet the exposure criteria (stationed or working at Camp Lejeune for at least 30 days between August 1, 1953 and December 31, 1987) and who have one of the qualifying conditions. The CLJA waives sovereign immunity for qualifying claims. Punitive damages are explicitly excluded under the statute. Damages are offset by benefits already received from the VA and DOJ.
In Roundup, AFFF, and asbestos cases, punitive damages are available in many jurisdictions where the defendant’s conduct meets the applicable standard.
Wrongful death damages under Florida Statutes § 768.16–768.26 are available to the family when the toxic exposure has caused death. Many mesothelioma, kidney cancer, and lymphoma cases ultimately resolve as wrongful death claims because of the lethality of the underlying disease.
Factors That Influence the Value of a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
Proof of exposure. This is the single most important element of a toxic exposure case. For Camp Lejeune, service records and unit histories. For PFAS/AFFF, employment records, fire department training logs, and equipment inventories. For Roundup, employment records and product purchase receipts. For asbestos, shipyard, industrial, or construction work history, often reconstructed from union records, Social Security earnings history, and co-worker affidavits. No exposure proof, no case.
Qualifying diagnosis. Each toxic exposure litigation has a list of accepted qualifying conditions based on published epidemiology. Camp Lejeune qualifying conditions include kidney cancer, bladder cancer, liver cancer, leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple myeloma, Parkinson’s disease, and others. AFFF qualifying cancers include testicular, kidney, thyroid, and ulcerative colitis. Roundup — non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Asbestos — mesothelioma, lung cancer, asbestosis. A diagnosis outside the accepted list may not qualify.
Latency and causation. Toxic exposure diseases have long latency periods. Mesothelioma typically appears 20–50 years after exposure. Camp Lejeune cancers typically appear decades after service. The defense often argues alternative causation — smoking, family history, other occupational exposures. Expert witnesses in epidemiology, toxicology, and oncology are essential.
Statute of limitations and filing deadlines. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act required initial administrative claims by August 10, 2024 in most cases, with a two-year limitations window opening after denial or deemed denial, extending the filing horizon meaningfully through 2029 for qualifying claimants. Florida’s general two-year statute of limitations applies to ordinary toxic exposure claims, with the discovery rule tolling the clock until the connection between exposure and disease can reasonably be known. Florida’s 12-year statute of repose under § 95.031(2)(b) has a latent-injury exception for long-latency toxic exposure cases.
Settlement matrix tier (for MDLs and global settlements). AFFF, Roundup, and other mass exposure MDLs have tiered settlement matrices driven by severity, treatment history, and residual impairment.
Florida Toxic Exposure FAQ
1. What is the Camp Lejeune Justice Act? The Camp Lejeune Justice Act of 2022 (part of the Honoring our PACT Act) is a federal statute that allows individuals exposed to contaminated water at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina between August 1, 1953 and December 31, 1987 — for a cumulative total of at least 30 days — to sue the United States for resulting harm. The drinking water at Camp Lejeune was contaminated with trichloroethylene (TCE), perchloroethylene (PCE), benzene, and vinyl chloride from leaking underground storage tanks and off-base dry cleaning operations. Qualifying conditions include kidney cancer, bladder cancer, liver cancer, leukemia, NHL, multiple myeloma, Parkinson’s disease, and several other conditions with adequate scientific support. Claims are adjudicated in the Eastern District of North Carolina. Sky Law Firm takes Florida-resident Camp Lejeune claims regardless of where the claimant currently lives.
2. Is the Camp Lejeune deadline still open? The initial administrative claim deadline was August 10, 2024. After an administrative claim has been filed, the claimant has a two-year window after denial or deemed denial to file suit in the Eastern District of North Carolina. Additional categories remain open for qualifying claimants through 2029. The specific deadline applicable to your situation depends on when exposure occurred, when diagnosis was made, and when the administrative claim was filed. Call us for a timeline analysis.
3. I was a dependent, not a servicemember, at Camp Lejeune. Do I qualify? Yes. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act extends to any individual who was present at the base for at least 30 cumulative days during the qualifying window — including military dependents, civilian employees, and contractors.
4. What is PFAS and AFFF? PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a class of manmade chemicals used in, among other things, aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) used to fight hydrocarbon fires. Firefighters, military personnel (particularly Navy and Air Force), and airport workers have long used AFFF in both training and actual fire response. PFAS are persistent in the body and in the environment (“forever chemicals”). Health effects include testicular cancer, kidney cancer, thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis, high cholesterol, and reproductive effects. Claims are consolidated in MDL 2873, In re: Aqueous Film-Forming Foams Products Liability Litigation, D.S.C.
5. Is Roundup litigation still active? Yes. Despite Bayer’s stated position, state-court and individual federal filings continue. Multiple juries have returned significant plaintiff verdicts. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma is the primary qualifying diagnosis. Eligible plaintiffs include landscapers, agricultural workers, groundskeepers, licensed applicators, and some homeowner / recreational users with sufficient documented exposure.
6. What is mesothelioma and how is asbestos litigation handled? Mesothelioma is a cancer of the mesothelial lining of the lungs (pleural), abdomen (peritoneal), or heart (pericardial), caused almost exclusively by asbestos exposure. Exposure pathways include shipyard work, pipefitting, insulation work, boiler work, brake repair, construction (particularly floor tile, joint compound, ceiling texture), and certain industrial settings. Recovery comes through a combination of state-court litigation against solvent defendants and claims filed against asbestos bankruptcy trusts (more than 60 trusts, collectively holding tens of billions in reserved funds).
7. I worked in the Florida sugarcane industry. Could my exposure be compensable? Potentially. The Florida sugarcane industry in the Lake Okeechobee region (Belle Glade, Pahokee, Clewiston, South Bay) used substantial volumes of pesticides and herbicides for decades, including paraquat, glyphosate, organophosphates, and carbamates. Workers exposed through direct application, harvest operations, and field residence have subsequently developed Parkinson’s disease, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and other conditions with scientific support linking them to specific pesticide exposures. Paraquat claims are consolidated in MDL 3004. Other chemical-specific MDLs and state filings may apply.
8. My spouse died of cancer we believe was caused by toxic exposure. Can we still sue? Yes. Florida Statutes § 768.16–768.26 authorize wrongful death claims. Under the Camp Lejeune Justice Act, the estate of a deceased qualifying individual may file the claim. In mesothelioma, Roundup, and AFFF cases, surviving family members routinely recover through the decedent’s estate.
9. What is the statute of limitations for a Florida toxic exposure case? General Florida personal injury limitations (two years for claims accruing after March 24, 2023) with the discovery rule tolling the clock until the connection between exposure and disease is or reasonably should have been known. Florida’s 12-year statute of repose under § 95.031(2)(b) has a latent-injury exception that typically preserves toxic exposure claims. Camp Lejeune claims follow the CLJA deadlines, not Florida law.
10. How much does a Florida toxic exposure lawyer cost? Nothing up front. Sky Law Firm takes toxic exposure cases on contingency. We advance expert, filing, and investigation costs. You pay no fee unless we recover.
Why Work with Sky Law Firm for a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
Toxic exposure litigation is patient work. The records are scattered across decades. The causation science is technical. The procedural paths are different for each exposure class — Camp Lejeune goes to the Eastern District of North Carolina through the administrative claim process, AFFF goes to MDL 2873 in the District of South Carolina, Roundup goes to individual state courts and scattered federal actions, and asbestos goes to a mix of state courts and bankruptcy trusts.
Sky Law Firm runs all of those tracks. We coordinate with national plaintiffs’ firms serving on the relevant steering committees. We reconstruct exposure histories from service records, employment records, Social Security earnings histories, union records, and co-worker affidavits. And we value cases against real settlement data from the current matrices, not against outdated expectations.
The firm is led by attorney Andrew Sky and is headquartered at 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309.
Steps to Take in a Florida Toxic Exposure Case
- Document your exposure. Service records for military. Employment records for occupational exposures. Product identification for Roundup, AFFF, and asbestos. Residence history for community water contamination.
- Obtain your complete medical records. Oncology, pulmonology, urology, nephrology — whichever specialty relates to your disease.
- Preserve any physical evidence — old product containers, labels, equipment, protective gear.
- Request service records from the National Personnel Records Center for Camp Lejeune and other military exposure claims.
- Request Social Security earnings history to reconstruct employment timelines for asbestos and industrial exposure cases.
- Document co-worker and witness information — names, contact information, shared work history.
- Keep a timeline — when exposure occurred, when symptoms began, when diagnosis was made, what treatment you received.
- Do not sign releases or settlements from defendants or insurers without counsel.
- File administrative claims on time. The Camp Lejeune claim window was critical; MDL intakes periodically close.
- Call Sky Law Firm at (305) 320-4529.
Understanding the Real Compensation You Are Owed
Toxic exposure diseases are often life-ending. Mesothelioma carries a median survival of approximately 12–21 months depending on stage and treatment. Many Camp Lejeune and Roundup cancers carry substantial mortality. Parkinson’s disease is progressive and irreversible. The compensation calculation has to reflect both the immediate cost of treatment and the full human cost — the years of life lost, the quality-of-life impact on the years that remain, and the loss to the family.
A properly built toxic exposure file includes a life-care plan for survivors, an economic damages report for lost income and lost support, and a pain-and-suffering analysis grounded in real disease trajectory. Sky Law Firm assembles all of that. Call (305) 320-4529.
Causes of Florida Toxic Exposure Litigation
Military base contamination — Camp Lejeune TCE/PCE/benzene/vinyl chloride; other base-specific contamination patterns under review.
Firefighter and airport worker AFFF exposure — PFAS contamination from decades of training foam use.
Agricultural pesticide and herbicide exposure — paraquat (Parkinson’s), glyphosate/Roundup (non-Hodgkin lymphoma), organophosphates (neurological). Florida’s agricultural belt, particularly the Lake Okeechobee sugarcane region, has meaningful occupational exposure history.
Industrial and occupational asbestos — shipyards, boilers, pipe insulation, brake repair, construction trades.
Talc and cosmetics — Johnson & Johnson talcum powder claims for ovarian cancer and mesothelioma.
Community drinking water contamination — PFAS near military bases and AFFF training areas; industrial solvent contamination in some municipal supplies.
Hurricane-related chemical releases — catastrophic weather events releasing industrial chemicals into neighborhoods and waterways.
Indoor air quality in defective construction materials — historical Chinese drywall sulfur off-gassing, currently certain insulation and flooring products.
Why Choose a Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer Who Understands the Full Procedural Map
The Camp Lejeune Justice Act is sui generis. It is a waiver of sovereign immunity. It requires administrative exhaustion. It has jurisdictional peculiarities. A lawyer who has not read the statute and internalized its procedural framework will either miss a deadline or file in the wrong forum.
PFAS/AFFF is an MDL. Roundup is a fractured landscape of state filings, settled cases, and active trials. Asbestos is a dual-track system of litigation and trust claims. Each path requires specific competency.
Sky Law Firm has that map. We know which cases belong where, which deadlines apply to which claims, and which co-counsel to bring in when leadership-level input adds value.
Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyers Serving Statewide
Sky Law Firm serves Florida toxic exposure clients from 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309. We file Camp Lejeune cases in the Eastern District of North Carolina, AFFF cases in MDL 2873 (D.S.C.), Roundup cases in Florida state courts or the appropriate forum, and asbestos cases in Florida state courts with trust claims filed in parallel. Consultations in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Creole. Phones answered twenty-four hours. Call (305) 320-4529 or 1-844-OUCH-844.
Types of Florida Toxic Exposure Cases We Handle
Camp Lejeune Justice Act — exposure between August 1, 1953 and December 31, 1987, cumulative 30-day minimum, qualifying disease. Filing horizon extending through 2029.
PFAS / AFFF firefighting foam (MDL 2873, D.S.C.) — firefighters, military personnel, airport workers, and community exposure near AFFF training sites.
Roundup / glyphosate — non-Hodgkin lymphoma in landscapers, farmworkers, groundskeepers, applicators, and heavy homeowner users.
Asbestos / mesothelioma — occupational exposure in shipyards, construction, pipefitting, boiler work, brake repair, and industrial settings. Litigation + trust claims.
Florida sugarcane and agricultural pesticide exposure — paraquat (Parkinson’s, MDL 3004), organophosphates, and other agricultural chemicals. Heavy focus on the Lake Okeechobee region: Belle Glade, Pahokee, Clewiston, South Bay.
Paraquat (MDL 3004, S.D. Ill.) — Parkinson’s disease in licensed applicators and agricultural workers.
Johnson & Johnson talcum powder — ovarian cancer and mesothelioma from alleged asbestos contamination of talc.
Community water contamination — PFAS, industrial solvents, and other groundwater contamination.
Chemical plant and refinery releases — emergency releases, fires, and chronic emissions affecting surrounding communities.
Hurricane-associated chemical exposures — tank rupture, industrial site flooding, chemical plumes.
Occupational chemical exposure claims — welding fumes, silica, diacetyl (popcorn lung), isocyanates, and solvent exposure.
Common Injuries and Diseases in Florida Cases
- Kidney cancer
- Bladder cancer
- Liver cancer
- Leukemia (including myelodysplastic syndrome and multiple myeloma)
- Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
- Mesothelioma (pleural, peritoneal, pericardial)
- Lung cancer
- Asbestosis and pulmonary fibrosis
- Testicular cancer
- Thyroid cancer and thyroid disease
- Ovarian cancer
- Parkinson’s disease
- Ulcerative colitis
- Cardiovascular disease (certain toxic exposures)
- Neuropathy and neurological injury
- Birth defects (certain exposures during pregnancy)
- Reproductive injury and infertility
- Wrongful death
Why You Need a Florida Toxic Exposure Lawyer
You are suing the United States government (Camp Lejeune), Fortune 50 chemical companies (Monsanto/Bayer, DuPont/Chemours, 3M), or industrial defense infrastructure dating to the 1970s (asbestos). These defendants have, collectively, the deepest legal resources of any defendant class in American civil litigation. Their experts are tenured epidemiologists and toxicologists. Their attorneys have written the treatises.
You need a firm that matches them with disciplined causation evidence, experienced co-counsel relationships, and the financial capacity to run a case for years. Sky Law Firm is that firm. Call (305) 320-4529.
Florida Toxic Exposure Statistics and Data
Understanding the scope of toxic exposure 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.
Florida handles thousands of toxic exposure cases annually. Contact Sky Law Firm for specific statistics relevant to your case.
The Insurance Company's Playbook in Toxic Exposure Cases
Insurance companies handling toxic exposure 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 toxic exposure, 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 Toxic Exposure 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 Toxic Exposure Cases
Every day you wait after a toxic exposure 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
Why Wait? Start Your Case Today
The Camp Lejeune Justice Act filing horizon is closing for many categories. MDL intake windows tighten as settlement matrices finalize. Medical records get purged. Witnesses pass away — and in Florida cases with long latency, many of the most important witnesses are themselves elderly.
If you or a family member has been diagnosed with a disease you believe may be connected to a toxic exposure, call Sky Law Firm today. The consultation is free. The exposure analysis is patient and methodical. If a viable claim exists, we file it. If one does not, we tell you honestly.
Here’s How You Can Reach Us:
- Phone: (305) 320-4529
- Toll-Free: 1-844-OUCH-844
- Address: 3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
- Firm: Sky Law Firm
- Attorney: Andrew Sky
- Languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Creole
- Consultation: Free, confidential, available 24/7
- Fees: Contingency — no recovery, no fee
Every case is evaluated on its own facts. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. This page is general information, not legal advice about any particular situation. Whether you have a viable Florida toxic exposure claim can be determined only by a licensed attorney reviewing your specific facts.
Visit Sky Law Firm
Sky Law Firm
3333 W Commercial Blvd STE 105, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
(305) 320-4529
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