In and around Dover, catastrophic injuries can occur in the same places people rely on every day—industrial and maintenance work, loading/unloading, roadway crashes, and sometimes even pedestrian-heavy areas when communities gather.
When an amputation happens, the “why” matters just as much as the “what.” In many Dover cases, liability may involve:
- Employer safety failures (training, lockout/tagout issues, missing guards, improper equipment maintenance)
- Vehicle and trucking impacts (speeding, distracted driving, unsafe stopping, defective components)
- Property hazards (uneven surfaces, poor lighting, unmarked hazards, inadequate inspection)
- Product or medical equipment problems that escalate injury severity
The key is building a causation story that connects the incident to the surgical outcome—because insurers and defense teams will often argue the amputation was unavoidable or medically unrelated.


