Monthly Archives: March 2026
The Rebuttable Presumption In Timesharing Cases: Why 50/50 Is The Starting Line, Not The Finish Line
What we have noticed as attorneys is that many parents in Florida are operating on a 2010s playbook in a 2026 world. They think that securing an equal timesharing schedule is a hard-fought victory at the end of a long litigation road. They are wrong. Since the landmark changes to Florida law, the 50/50… Read More »
Proving “Actual” Damages: Why Florida Courts Now Only Care About What You Paid, Not What You Were Billed
You just spent three days in a Florida hospital after a car accident. You open your mail to find a stack of invoices totaling $60,000. Naturally, you assume that $60,000 is the baseline for your personal injury claim. You think, “The hospital says I owe this, so the person who hit me should pay… Read More »
Biometric Compulsion In Criminal Cases
Your smartphone isn’t just a phone anymore. It is a high-definition external hard drive for your soul. It contains every text you’ve sent, every location you’ve visited, and a chronological history of your digital life. For law enforcement, seizing your device is like finding the “black box” of a crashed airplane. The only problem… Read More »
