Crush injuries don’t always “look serious” at first. Swelling, bruising, and stiffness can mask deeper problems—like compression injuries, tendon damage, or nerve involvement—that show up after imaging and follow-up exams.
In Key West, there’s an added practical pressure: the pace of work. On many job sites, documentation isn’t always prioritized, maintenance logs may be stored offsite or overwritten, and supervisors move on quickly after an incident. If you wait too long, it can become harder to prove:
- what safety steps were required at the time,
- what was actually done,
- and how the injury links to the accident mechanism.
A lawyer can move sooner to protect your rights and preserve the proof that insurers often challenge.


