experience - dedication- results

EMILIO A. CACACE 
OF COUNSEL

Bar Admission

New York State 2000
Florida – Admitted 2009


Education

J.D. Hofstra University, School of Law
B.A.  State University of New York, Stony Brook
Florida Supreme Court Certified Circuit Civil Mediator

Location
105 Maxess Road, Suite S128
Melville, New York 11747

Emilio A. Cacace serves as Of Counsel at Hollander Legal Group, P.C. He runs his own legal practice, Cacace Law Firm, along with a mediation firm, Ace Mediation, both located in South Florida.

In 2024, Emilio joined Hollander Legal Group as an appellate counsel. Before establishing his own firms, he managed the Appellate Unit for a prominent insurance company in New York, focusing on No-Fault and personal injury matters. Emilio achieved success in a variety of appeals during his tenure, including the notable case of Forrest Chen Acupuncture v. Geico Ins. Co., 54 A.D.3d 996 (NY 2nd Dep’t 2008). He also participated in trials, arbitrations, examinations under oath, and depositions related to No-Fault matters.

 

Emilio made the transition to South Florida in 2009, where he continued to represent another leading insurance company. He managed No-Fault and personal injury cases, participating in jury trials that reached verdicts and conducting hundreds of depositions and mediations. Emilio achieved many favorable settlements and dismissals for the insurance company and successfully won numerous motions in the County and Circuit Courts across Broward, Palm Beach, and Miami-Dade Counties.

Emilio is admitted to practice law in both New York and Florida State. He received his Juris Doctor from Hofstra Law School in 1999, where he was recognized on the Dean’s List and served as a member of the Hofstra Labor and Employment Law Journal. Prior to that, he graduated from Stony Brook University in 1996 with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science, also making the Dean’s List and being inducted into the National Political Science Honor Society, Pi Sigma Alpha.

Publication: Cacace, E. “Insurance Companies Face Another Hurdle in Defending No-Fault Cases” The Nassau Lawyer. (April, 2006).