Many Agoura Hills injury cases involve fast-moving circumstances: commuters, deliveries, pedestrians, and drivers navigating traffic patterns throughout the day. When a fracture is involved, insurers may try to minimize the seriousness by arguing that:
- the injury is unrelated to the incident (or “pre-existing”),
- the treatment timeline doesn’t match what they think happened,
- you should have recovered faster,
- or your symptoms are “soft” compared to the diagnosis.
That’s why timing and documentation matter. A fracture can look clear on imaging but still be challenged—especially if records are incomplete, if symptoms were recorded inconsistently, or if the incident details are disputed.


