http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/boca-raton/sfl-who-can-i-sue
-p100409,0,4368025.story

Have you been bitten by a vicious dog? Been the victim of a surgical
mishap? A sexual assault on a cruise ship? There's a lawyer waiting for
your call.

Boca Raton-based whocanisue.com has scores of billboards and bus-shelter
signs dominating the tri-county landscape, showing a lawyer slipping on
a banana peel. The service matches website visitors with lawyers in a
quick-and-easy form that takes just minutes to complete.

Choose your complaint from a drop-down menu - nursing home abuse, for
example - and then a sub-category, such as bed sores, dehydration or
falls and fractures. Plug in your ZIP code and in the click of a mouse,
a page or more of lawyers appears.

But there's controversy over this seemingly quick way to sue for a quick
buck.

The site has drawn the ire of many in the legal community, including the
vice chairman of a Florida Bar advertising-ethics committee. Critics say
whocanisue and other online referral services degrade the legal
profession and often steer the public to lawyers who operate under a
business model of "bring in as many cases as you can and settle them."
Others, including those who advertise there, say it's just another way
to attract clients.

"I'm getting probably twice as many phone calls," said Martin Saenz, a
Miami labor and employment lawyer who has been advertising on the site
for just more than a month. "Of course, not all of them have a case. A
lot of time is spent going through cases, but I get clients. Old-school
lawyers have to keep up with technology."

Mitch Polay, a Fort Lauderdale personal injury and criminal attorney,
says colleagues recommended the site, and in the month he's been using
it, his phone hasn't stopped ringing.

"The name was catchy," Polay said. "I was upset I didn't think of it."

Whocanisue's tactics are "egregious" and "directly appealing to people
who want to be litigious, to seek out a claim," said West Palm Beach
personal injury attorney Gary Lesser, managing partner of a 10-lawyer
firm started by his grandfather.

"There are real people who are hurt, who need lawyers," he said.
"Whocanisue.com is part of an emerging trend. They are not a law firm,
but a referral agency."

Lesser is vice chairman of the Florida Bar's advertising committee,
which governs lawyer advertising by reviewing and monitoring ads.
Lawyers are supposed to submit their ads in advance, Lesser said, but
with 87,000 Bar members it's impossible to know how many lawyers are not
doing so.

Complicating matters is that the Bar only regulates lawyers, not
referral services like whocanisue.com, which skirts the rules for lawyer
ads. If a lawyer who advertises on it breaks a Bar rule, such as
promising a client a specific outcome such as a monetary judgment, the
lawyer can face discipline. Sanctions range from a fine to a reprimand
to suspension, though the latter is seldom used and reserved for repeat
offenders, according to Lesser.

Even some law firms advertising on TV - something once frowned upon in
the legal community - are critical of whocanisue.com's approach.
Powerhouse West Palm Beach firm Searcy Denney Scarola Barnhart & Shipley
runs spots, but senior partner F. Gregory Barnhart says it isn't "direct
advertising" and that they don't even include phone numbers. The
whocanisue marketing strategy, he said, is "a disgrace."

"We're not advertising for whiplash cases or bad backs or
slip-and-falls," Barnhart said. "We handle large cases. Those people who
slip and fall in Publix, God bless them. If [a firm] has to hire some
guy who looks like a fireman to keep the phones ringing, that's fine"
for them.

Whocanisue was launched in October 2008 by Curtis Wolfe, 46, a former
in-house counsel at a large Miami firm. He's well aware that his site's
name might offend some.

"It's definitely meant to be edgy," he said. "We wanted to provoke
people. Most lawyer advertising is unremarkable and not memorable. I
would sit at home and see these ads asking if you're injured blah, blah,
blah. There was no branding involved. We have a brand."

The company's office on West Palmetto Park Road in Boca Raton has 22
employees, the majority in sales. Two hundred and fifty law firms are
signed up as clients and about 25,000 people visit the site each month.
Whocanisue.com also advertises in Texas, California, New York,
Pennsylvania and other states.

"At this rate, we are projecting to do $10 million-plus in 2010," said
president Vincent Celentano, who helped finance the multimillion-dollar
start up, which includes irreverent television spots featuring buxom
nurses and a pack of lawyers chasing an ambulance.

Despite the parody, Wolfe says, his site actually is the
"anti-ambulance-chasing lawyers."

"Come to our site, then find the attorney of your choosing when you're
ready," he said.

Injuries top the list of queries, followed by loan modifications and
foreclosures and then employment issues.

Wolfe says the site makes it very clear: "Whocanisue doesn't represent
you. You're represented by whoever you hire as an attorney."

Lesser said he and many other lawyers are dismayed at its appeal.

"We get together and say: 'It has come to this?' "
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