I just hate to think that the Wiegands were the ones to reach out to Winkleman in the days after Chloe’s tragic death. I didn’t have time to look through the 167 pages you posted, but here’s what I found regarding Florida law on attorneys texting potential clients (as I hypothesized earlier based on ABA Rules). Of course, he would have had to acquire a phone number somehow, but there are ways....
In 2015, the Florida Bar Standing Committee on Advertising decided that texting potential clients was a forbidden form of solicitation similar to telephone solicitation. However, later that year, the Florida Bar board of governors overruled that decision and stated that
lawyers could send such messages to prospective clients, as long as they complied with the advertising rules for written and email communications.
“These [rules in Florida] are onerous, requiring the text to include attorney qualifications, disclosures about how the lawyer obtained the contact information, and a statement that the individual should delete the message if they have counsel already,” says Murphy of Wake Forest.
Can lawyers text potential clients?
I guess how the contact was made will remain a mystery, but I’d rather blame Winkleman the hustler.