Amputation injuries are medically complex and legally time-sensitive. In Blythe, cases often involve at least one of the following pressures:
- Multi-party incidents: crashes involving commercial vehicles, work-related traffic, or shared responsibility between drivers and employers.
- Evidence that disappears fast: surveillance footage from businesses and traffic-related recordings can be overwritten or deleted.
- Insurance calls before you’re ready: adjusters may request statements while you’re still treating, sedated, or managing pain.
- Work and commute disruption: many injured people need help proving lost earning capacity and long-term functional limits, not just current bills.
Because the injury is permanent, the legal strategy has to be built around future needs—prosthetics, rehabilitation, and ongoing care—not only what the hospital costs on day one.


