If you are reading this after a crash, you are likely dealing with a federal investigation, an insurance company, and an aircraft owner all at once. A Fort Lauderdale aviation accident lawyer steps into that gap for you. These cases turn on records most families never see — the flight data, the engine maintenance history, the pilot's logbook, the parts that were last replaced and by whom. Robert DiStefano helps you find out what actually happened and who is responsible.
Aviation claims are governed by federal rules, not the ordinary Florida traffic code. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) writes the safety regulations every aircraft and pilot must follow — you will see them referenced as Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14 C.F.R.). After a serious crash, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) takes the lead on figuring out the cause. What that investigation finds — and what it leaves out — can shape your case for years.
Liability rarely stops with the pilot. Depending on what went wrong, the people who can be held accountable may include the charter or air-tour company, the owner who leased the aircraft, the shop that performed the last inspection, or the manufacturer of a component that failed. We build the case toward every responsible party — not just the easiest one to name.
The wreckage tells the truth. Our job is to read it before it is moved, repaired, or quietly written off.