If you were hurt on the water near Fort Lauderdale, a boating accident lawyer's first job is not to argue your case — it is to figure out which set of rules controls it. The deck of a vessel, the open ocean, and a busy inland channel can each fall under a different body of law. A recreational boater rear-ended on the Intracoastal is governed by different rules than a deckhand hurt on a working charter. Get that wrong and you can blow a deadline or sue under the wrong law.
Water cases pull from three places at once: federal maritime law, a special federal statute called the Jones Act for crew members, and Florida's own boating laws for recreational vessels. Some claims even reach into international waters, where yet another rule takes over. Most lawyers rarely touch any of this. We do.
We handle the full range of on-water injuries: cruise-ship falls and assaults, dive-boat and snorkel-charter incidents, fishing and sunset-charter crashes, personal-watercraft (jet ski) collisions, propeller strikes, and wrongful-death cases offshore. Whatever happened, we start by answering the threshold question — who was hurt, and where — and build from there.