Tega Cay is a suburban community where many residents commute, drive to work, and rely on nearby roads and shopping corridors. That day-to-day movement matters legally because amputation injuries often occur in situations where evidence can disappear quickly—like crash scenes, jobsite conditions, or device/product storage and inspections.
Local realities that can affect your claim:
- Traffic-related evidence moves fast: video may be overwritten, vehicles get repaired, and witnesses disperse.
- Workplace injuries require prompt documentation: safety logs, training records, and incident reports are time-sensitive.
- Medical records may arrive in fragments: ER notes, imaging, surgery reports, and follow-up prosthetic plans may be stored across multiple providers.
When an amputation injury happens, the clock starts—not just in the courtroom, but in the real world where details vanish.


