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Florida questions and answers
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What are my chances of winning a sexual assault or rape case in Florida?
Asked in Aventura, FL | June 11, 2014
Answered by 1 attorney -
Suing business associate for defrauding me. What type of attorney do I need?
Asked in Brandon, FL | February 10, 2026During 2023 I entered into an Airbnb investment arrangement with a long term friend who represented himself as a co-business partner and operates a business focused on managing short-term rental investments. I was led to believe I would earn passive income through co-ownership of Airbnb properties, with promised returns averaging approximately $20k per month. To date, I have received no returns. He instructed me through a third party funding company he works closely with, to obtain high-limit or unlimited business credit cards in my name, which were then used primarily for his benefit. As a result, I am left with approximately $50k in business credit card debt, in addition to $7k paid to him as a business retainer. While there is no written contract, I have extensive text messages and other documentation supporting false representations, misuse of funds, and potential fraud.
Answered by 1 attorney -
We own a long-standing appliance store. A customer thinks we scuffed her laundry room floor but we don't think so. What should we do?
Asked in Englewood, FL | January 17, 2026Performed a service visit to replace a pedestal on a customer’s washer/dryer. No damage was reported during or immediately after service, and no issues were noted by the technician at the time. Approximately 16+ days later, the customer reported alleged floor damage and later provided photos and an estimate seeking full flooring replacement. The photos did not clearly demonstrate causation or damage consistent with the service performed, and the estimate did not attribute fault or identify localized repair scope, instead proposing full replacement (betterment).
Company reviewed the timeline, documentation, and estimate, requested clarification, and issued a written determination that causation could not be established. Company policy is to take responsibility when damage is clearly attributable to its work; however, based on delayed reporting, lack of contemporaneous evidence, absence of professional attribution, and unreasonable replacement scope, company declined responsibility. Communications were professional, consistent, and documented. Basil remains prepared to respond. What are the next steps if customer continues and do we need legal help?
Answered by 1 attorney
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