Amputation injuries are uniquely documentation-heavy. In the first days, important proof can disappear—surveillance footage overwrites, scene evidence is cleaned up, vehicles are repaired, and witness memories fade.
In Montclair, that can mean:
- Traffic incidents where dashcam or nearby business security systems are overwritten on short schedules.
- Pedestrian/vehicle conflicts near higher-activity streets where witnesses come and go.
- Worksite-related injuries involving contractors and subcontractors, where incident reporting may be fragmented across employers.
A strong claim depends on acting early to preserve what matters: medical records, incident documentation, and the chain linking the event to the amputation outcome.


