0 a lawyer who tries to get work by persuading someone who has been in an accident to claim money from the person or company responsible for the accident: --
Those required that for the first time the addresses of the parties should be placed on the public register, which could only assist the work of ambulance chasers.
Frank also goes too far when he even insults the patient's granddaughter by calling her an ambulance chaser.
Does he not agree that it would be very undesirable for us to return to the days when certain lawyers were regarded with utter contempt and called ambulance chasers?
Concern has been expressed about the number of so-called ambulance chasers who have been touting for business in ways that have received unfavourable publicity.
They are often referred to as ambulance chasers, but they chase other forms of business, too.
It maintained that such access would assist the activities of ambulance chasers that made unsolicited approaches to parties.
One critic described him as an identity politics ambulance chaser and another said he represented a right-wing publicity mill.
An ambulance chaser, who was not a solicitor, passed the action on to some firm.