If you have been injured on a cruise ship, check your cruise ship ticket for important information. This ticket acts like a contract between you and the cruise line. The cruise ticket may require you to pursue your injury claim in a specific location, such as Miami or Los Angeles. It will also set a time limit for bringing a cruise ship injury lawsuit and inform you of how long you have to report your injury to the cruise line. If you do not follow the rules on the ticket, you can lose your right to pursue a cruise ship injury lawsuit. Cruise Ship Tickets
If you think you might have a Admiralty Maritime case, Contact our Admiralty Maritime Lawyers Immediately for Help.
Information on maritime law, admiralty law, the Death on the High Seas Act, the Longshore and Harbor Workers Compensation Act, the Outer Continental Shelf Act and your rights at sea.
Maritime injury information including Jones Act vs. Workers' Compensation, unseaworthy vessels, at-risk workers, maritime wrongful death and what to do if you are injured at sea.
Information on the Jones Act including remedies, damages, examples of employer negligence, maintenance and cure and Jones Act FAQs.
Cruise ship injury and accident information including types of cruise ship injuries, cruise ship regulations and cruise injury FAQs.
Information for offshore rig and platform workers, tugboat and barge workers, longshore and harbor workers, commercial fishermen, crabbers, factory trawler workers, merchant mariners, deckhands, dredge workers and ship, tanker and freighter crew who are at risk for developing maritime injuries.
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