Statesboro residents often get hurt in situations where the “story” can be hard to prove—especially when multiple people were involved, witnesses have conflicting recollections, or the other side argues the fracture was unrelated.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Traffic and commuting collisions on regional routes where braking distance and lane changes are disputed.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk injuries near busy retail and downtown areas, where surveillance footage may be limited or overwritten quickly.
- Falls in public places after weather changes (rain, mud, and slick surfaces) lead to hip, ankle, and wrist fractures.
- Construction and industrial workforce injuries where safety practices, training, and equipment condition become key liability issues.
In these settings, insurance companies may try to narrow the case to “a temporary injury” or argue that your fracture existed before the incident. Your medical records and the timing of symptoms matter—but so does how your case is framed.


