Amputation injuries don’t follow a neat schedule. The “initial trauma” is often only the beginning—tissue damage, infection concerns, complications, and surgical decisions can unfold over days or weeks.
In Michigan injury claims, insurers and opposing parties typically look for gaps: missing records, unclear timelines, inconsistent statements, or evidence that’s hard to obtain later. In East Lansing, that can be especially challenging when:
- Injuries occur during commuting hours or near high-traffic corridors, where evidence can be time-sensitive (dashcam footage may overwrite; scene photos may be lost; witnesses may move on).
- Workplace incidents involve industrial equipment or construction activity, where employers may control reports, safety documentation, and internal incident logs.
- Medical records are split between facilities, requiring careful tracking of imaging, surgical notes, rehabilitation plans, and prosthetic prescriptions.
A strong case starts early: preserving proof, pinning down dates, and translating medical events into legal damages—without forcing you to relive everything while you’re recovering.


