Kentucky operates under a strict liability statute for dog bite injuries — one of the most victim-favorable legal standards in personal injury law. Under KRS 258.235(4), a dog owner is liable for damages caused by their dog to any person, regardless of whether the dog had ever shown prior aggression or whether the owner had any reason to believe the dog was dangerous. There is no “one free bite” rule in Kentucky. The moment a dog injures you, the owner’s liability is established by statute.
This strict liability framework applies to bites, knockdowns, scratches, and other physical injuries caused by a dog’s conduct. It covers attacks on public property, on the victim’s own property, and on the dog owner’s property when the victim had a lawful right to be there. It applies to delivery drivers, mail carriers, neighbors, children visiting a friend’s home, and anyone else who encounters the animal in a situation where they had every right to be present. If you were injured by someone else’s dog in Louisville or anywhere in Kentucky, the law is already on your side — the question is how effectively it gets used.
Louisville and Jefferson County’s dense residential neighborhoods, public parks, and commercial areas generate a significant volume of dog bite claims each year. Attacks range from minor puncture wounds to catastrophic facial injuries, nerve damage, tendon lacerations, and severe psychological trauma — particularly in children, who are statistically the most frequent victims of serious dog bite injuries. Forman & Associates has the trial experience and the legal knowledge to build a case that captures the full physical, emotional, and financial impact of what you have been through.
Dog bite cases move faster than most victims expect — and so does the evidence that determines their outcome. Dog owners and their homeowners or renters insurance carriers begin managing their exposure immediately after an attack. Incident reports get filed with animal control, and the language in those reports can be shaped to minimize the owner’s liability if you are not represented early. The dog’s history — including prior complaints filed with Louisville Metro Animal Services, previous bite reports, and any dangerous dog designations — is discoverable but time-sensitive. Witnesses who saw the attack are easiest to locate and interview in the days immediately following the incident.
Insurance carriers for dog owners respond to bite claims with a combination of coverage review and early settlement pressure. They understand Kentucky’s strict liability statute and know their insured is exposed — but they also know that unrepresented victims frequently accept early offers that fail to account for the full scope of their injuries, future medical needs, and psychological trauma. Facial scarring, nerve damage, and the emotional aftermath of a violent animal attack can require years of treatment and have lasting impacts on quality of life and professional appearance. Initial offers rarely reflect any of that.
Forman & Associates builds dog bite cases that capture every dimension of your harm. We obtain animal control records and the dog’s full complaint history. We document your injuries with medical experts who can establish the long-term prognosis for scarring, nerve function, and psychological recovery. We identify every applicable insurance policy — homeowners, renters, and any umbrella coverage — and pursue the maximum limits available. You should not have to absorb the permanent consequences of someone else’s animal. We make sure you don’t.
The most common and legally straightforward dog bite scenario. A dog bites without provocation and the owner is strictly liable under Kentucky statute — no prior history of aggression required.
Children are the most frequent victims of severe dog bite injuries. Facial bites, scalp lacerations, and eye injuries are tragically common in child attack cases, and the long-term psychological impact compounds the physical harm significantly.
Kentucky's strict liability statute covers injuries caused by a dog's conduct beyond biting — including knockdowns that cause fractures, head injuries, and spinal trauma, particularly in elderly or physically vulnerable victims.
Delivery professionals are among the most frequently attacked dog bite victims in Louisville. Their presence on a property is lawful and invited — which makes the owner's liability under Kentucky law clear and direct.
Dog bites that occur in Louisville parks, on public sidewalks, at outdoor dining areas, or in any public space are fully covered under Kentucky's strict liability framework. A leash law violation at the time of the attack strengthens liability further.
Being bitten on the dog owner's property does not eliminate your claim. If you had a lawful right to be there — as a guest, a service provider, or a visitor — the owner's strict liability applies in full.
Larry Forman has actually stood before juries and won. That track record is known in Kentucky legal circles — and it changes how the other side negotiates.
Animal control records, prior complaint histories, dangerous dog designations, witness accounts, and the owner's insurance coverage details — we begin building the full evidentiary picture from the moment we take your case.
KRS 258.235(4), Louisville Metro animal control ordinances, leash law violations, and the legal standards for punitive damages in repeat-offender cases — our team applies every available legal tool to maximize your recovery.
We identify every applicable insurance policy, document the full scope of your injuries with medical experts, and build a damages case that accounts for future treatment, permanent scarring, and psychological harm — not just the immediate medical bills.
You pay nothing out of pocket. Our firm advances all costs, and we only collect if we secure a recovery on your behalf. Zero financial risk to you.
Larry Forman is one of the most-watched legal voices online. He knows how to tell your story — in front of a jury, a judge, or a national audience.
Over $5,000,000 recovered for injured people all over the United States.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is unique.