In Sayreville, serious injuries often follow high-impact moments—work sites with heavy equipment, roadways with long commutes, and busy areas where pedestrians and vehicles share space. When the injury is a traumatic limb loss, the legal work can’t wait for the dust to settle.
Insurers may contact you quickly, ask for recorded statements, and try to narrow the story to “what happened that day.” But amputation injuries usually involve a longer medical arc—emergency stabilization, surgeries, infection or circulation issues, and difficult decisions that affect long-term outcomes.
Your claim needs a strategy that accounts for both the immediate incident and the medical progression that follows.


