Newman Injury Law Fort Lauderdale Personal Injury Lawyer

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    Fort Lauderdale Personal Injury Lawyer

    At Newman Injury Law, PLLC, founder Jared K. Newman has represented injured clients across South Florida for more than a decade. Our firm handles auto accidents, premises liability claims, wrongful death matters, and the full range of injury cases that come out of Broward County every day. Whether the harm came from a distracted driver, a negligent property owner, or a defective product, the first days after the incident set the direction of the case. Call today to speak with our Fort Lauderdale, FL personal injury lawyer. We will review your situation, explain the next steps, and tell you what your case is realistically worth.

    Why Choose Newman Injury Law, PLLC for Personal Injury Cases in Fort Lauderdale, FL?

    Civil Litigation Experience Built on Results

    Our founder, Jared K. Newman, is an experienced civil litigation attorney who has dedicated his practice to representing people injured while driving, walking, working, or otherwise going about their lives. He earned his J.D. from South Texas Law in 2009 and his undergraduate degree from the University of Florida in 2006. That litigation background matters when an insurer refuses to pay fairly and a case needs to be prepared for trial rather than shaped around a quick settlement.

    Proven Track Record

    Our firm has recovered millions of dollars for clients facing serious injuries. Personal injury representation is not just filing paperwork; it is developing medical evidence, preserving witness testimony, and making the other side justify every dollar they refuse to pay.

    Connected to the South Florida Legal Community

    Jared is an active member of the Broward County Bar Association and the Dade County Bar Association. Those connections help us work efficiently with the judges, defense firms, and medical providers we encounter regularly in Broward County personal injury cases.

    No Fee Unless We Win

    You do not pay us anything unless we recover compensation for you. Consultations are free. This contingency arrangement keeps our incentives aligned with yours throughout the life of the case.

    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “I would like to extend my deepest gratitude to Newman Injury Law, whose professionalism, perseverance, and compassion far exceeded my expectations. After being rear-ended in an accident that resulted in injury, I found myself overwhelmed and uncertain of how to move forward. From the very beginning, Mr. Jared Newman and his team demonstrated an unwavering commitment to representing me with integrity, care, and persistence. Their dedication to pursuing justice on my behalf provided not only legal guidance but also a great deal of emotional reassurance during an incredibly stressful time.” (Michael Hibbert)

    Read more reviews on our Google Business Profile.

    Types of Personal Injury Cases We Handle in Fort Lauderdale

    Personal injury law covers a wide range of situations where one person’s negligence causes harm to another. The evidence, insurance coverage, and procedural rules vary significantly across case types. Our firm represents injured clients in the following categories:

    • Car accidents. Rear-end collisions, intersection crashes, and highway wrecks dominate our auto docket. Florida’s no-fault rules and the 2023 legal changes affect how these cases are built from the start.
    • Motorcycle accidents. Riders face adjuster bias and unusual insurance rules, including exclusion from Florida PIP coverage. These claims require careful medical documentation and early evidence preservation.
    • Truck accidents. Commercial vehicle crashes involve multiple potentially responsible parties, including drivers, trucking companies, maintenance contractors, and cargo loaders.
    • Bicycle accidents. Cyclists struck by motorists often face serious injuries along with defense arguments about helmet use, lane position, and right-of-way.
    • Uber and Lyft accidents. Rideshare claims involve layered insurance coverage that depends on the driver’s app status at the time of the crash.
    • Slip and fall injuries. Premises liability claims against grocery stores, restaurants, and hotels require early evidence preservation and proof that the property owner knew about the hazard.
    • Trip and fall injuries. Raised pavement, uneven surfaces, and exposed wiring cause falls that share legal structure with slip cases but follow a different evidence trail.
    • Workers’ compensation. Injured workers face a no-fault system with specific notice requirements, physician-selection restrictions, and benefit limits under Florida law.
    • Wrongful death. Surviving family members can recover damages for lost support, medical and funeral costs, and the devastating consequences of losing a loved one.
    • Boating accidents. South Florida’s waterways produce year-round maritime claims that may fall under state, federal, or admiralty jurisdiction depending on the circumstances.
    • Pool and drowning injuries. Private and public pool incidents involve premises liability claims, Florida’s pool safety statutes, and difficult questions about supervision and warning signs.

    Florida Legal Requirements for Personal Injury Cases

    Florida personal injury law changed substantially in 2023, and understanding the current rules matters for every claim. The statute of limitations for most negligence actions is now two years from the date of injury under Section 95.11 of the Florida Statutes, reduced from the prior four-year window. Missing that deadline generally ends the case regardless of how strong the underlying liability looks.

    Florida also applies a modified comparative negligence rule. Section 768.81 allows recovery reduced by the injured person’s percentage of fault, but a plaintiff found more than 50 percent at fault recovers nothing. Comparative negligence often becomes the defining issue in contested cases, which is why insurers push so hard to assign fault to the injured person.

    Florida’s no-fault auto insurance system requires drivers to carry Personal Injury Protection under Section 627.736, which covers 80 percent of medical bills up to $10,000 after an auto crash. To step outside PIP and pursue full damages against the at-fault driver, the injured person must meet the serious injury threshold of permanent injury, significant scarring, or loss of an important bodily function.

    Punitive damages in personal injury cases are governed by Section 768.73, which caps most punitive awards at three times the compensatory damages or $500,000, whichever is greater. The FLHSMV crash reports remain primary evidence in auto cases and often drive early liability analysis on the defense side.

    What Damages Are Recoverable in a Fort Lauderdale Personal Injury Case?

    Compensation in a Fort Lauderdale personal injury case generally falls into economic damages, non-economic damages, and in limited cases punitive damages. Knowing what each category covers shapes how the case is valued from day one.

    Economic damages cover the financial losses you can document with bills and pay records. Past and future medical expenses include hospitalization, surgery, physical therapy, medications, and assistive devices. Lost wages and lost earning capacity cover both the time you missed from work and the permanent effect on your ability to earn income in the future. The CDC injury data consistently shows that serious injuries produce medical costs that extend well beyond the initial hospitalization, and projecting those future costs requires medical and economic input. Proving negligence starts with solid documentation of what the injury actually cost.

    Non-economic damages address pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, disfigurement, and inconvenience. These are real harms, but they are also the pieces insurers most aggressively dispute. Florida juries evaluate non-economic damages through the evidence presented, which means consistent medical treatment, reliable witness testimony, and clear documentation of how the injury changed your life. Medical consistency is often the difference between a fair settlement and a low one.

    Punitive damages are reserved for cases where the defendant’s conduct was intentional or grossly negligent. Ordinary negligence does not support a punitive claim, but drunk driving, intentional misconduct, or conduct motivated by unreasonable financial gain can trigger the higher category of recovery. These claims are uncommon but can significantly increase the total recovery when the facts support them.

    Property damage and out-of-pocket expenses round out the economic recovery. Transportation to medical appointments, home modifications required by a permanent injury, and loss of personal property all belong in the demand package. Insurance company tactics often relate to how these overlooked items can transform a settlement offer when properly documented and presented.

    Contact Newman Injury Law, PLLC

    If you have been injured in Fort Lauderdale or anywhere in Broward County, we would like to hear what happened. Consultations with Newman Injury Law, PLLC are free, and there is no fee unless we win your case. We will review the facts, explain Florida law as it applies to your situation, and give you an honest read on whether a claim is worth pursuing.

    Evidence fades quickly. Witnesses move, video footage gets overwritten, and memories shift. The sooner we can start documenting your case, the stronger it tends to be. Contact us to schedule a free consultation with our Fort Lauderdale personal injury lawyer and find out where you stand.



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