While amputation injuries can happen anywhere, Wheeling’s day-to-day environment creates patterns we see in real cases:
- Industrial and construction work in and around the Ohio River corridor, including maintenance work, equipment handling, and jobsite safety breakdowns.
- Workplace vehicle incidents—struck-by injuries in parking lots, loading areas, and shift-change traffic.
- Pedestrian activity near busy corridors (including visitors and commuters moving between parking, stops, and destinations), where high-impact collisions can cause catastrophic trauma.
- Late-season weather and road conditions that contribute to severe crashes—especially when injuries escalate after initial treatment.
When limb loss occurs, the legal question usually becomes: who failed to prevent the harm, and how did that failure contribute to the amputation outcome? That answer requires careful fact-building early.


