In California, insurance carriers will frequently move quickly—requesting statements, medical authorizations, and recorded interviews. After an amputation, those early interactions can shape how your case is evaluated.
Lodi-specific reality: many serious limb-loss injuries occur in settings where evidence can disappear fast—construction sites, loading areas, farm-adjacent properties, warehouse floors, and roadways with frequent traffic. If a surveillance camera is overwritten, a witness moves on, or a worksite incident log isn’t preserved, the case becomes harder to prove.
What we recommend right away:
- Request copies of the incident report (worksite, property manager, or responding agency records)
- Keep every discharge document, surgical report, and prosthetics prescription
- Write down the timeline while it’s fresh (even if you think you’ll “remember later”)
- Save receipts for travel, medications, mobility aids, and any home adjustments


