In White Plains, fracture cases often turn into “he said / she said” disputes because the facts are recorded quickly and remembered differently later—especially when:
- the injury happened near high-traffic corridors or crosswalks where multiple pedestrians and vehicles are involved
- witnesses saw the incident in pieces (not the full sequence)
- the injured person’s first medical visit doesn’t fully capture the mechanism (how the force occurred)
- the other side suggests the fracture was unrelated, pre-existing, or caused by something after the incident
Insurers may also argue that you should have returned to work sooner or that you didn’t follow treatment recommendations. The result? A smaller settlement offer than what your recovery actually requires.


