In serious injury cases, the word “catastrophic” isn’t just about the injury itself—it’s about what happens after it.
For example, Watervliet accidents often involve:
- Commuting-related collisions (injuries that disrupt returning to shift work)
- Commercial traffic and turn-lane impacts (harder liability questions)
- Pedestrian and bike exposure near active corridors (traumatic brain injuries and fractures)
- Worksite incidents tied to the region’s industrial and construction activity (spinal injuries, burns, crush injuries)
Catastrophic injuries can include traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, severe burns, major limb injuries, and permanent impairment. The case becomes time-sensitive because the evidence you’ll need may be lost, overwritten, or contradicted as repair reports, medical narratives, and witness accounts evolve.


