In Compton, broken bone injuries frequently follow incidents where the other side’s insurer will argue the injury is exaggerated, unrelated, or caused by something other than the crash or fall. That’s why we build claims around what happened, how it happened, and how quickly treatment followed.
In practice, insurers may scrutinize:
- The timing between the incident and the first diagnosis
- Whether your medical records match the mechanism of injury (how the force occurred)
- Gaps in treatment or follow-up appointments
- Statements you made at the scene or to adjusters
When the case involves commuting collisions, parking-lot impacts, or slip-and-fall injuries near businesses, documentation matters even more. The goal is to prevent the insurer from reducing your claim to “a minor fracture” when your recovery involves surgery, physical therapy, or long-term limitations.


