Many catastrophic injury matters in the area begin with the same pattern: a crash or incident creates sudden medical emergencies, then the insurance process starts before anyone fully understands how long recovery will take.
In Whittier, that commonly means:
- Intersection and turning collisions where liability may involve more than one driver (or disputes about right-of-way).
- Rear-end and lane-change crashes where the defense may argue the injury is “soft tissue” or temporary.
- Commercial vehicle involvement connected to local distribution routes, where documentation and maintenance records can be decisive.
- Pedestrian and bicycle injuries in higher-foot-traffic pockets, where cameras and witness accounts may be time-sensitive.
Catastrophic injuries are expensive and complex—not just medically, but evidentiary. A strong claim has to connect the incident to permanent impairment and then tie that impairment to future care needs.


