Many serious crush incidents don’t leave behind a simple “who did what” moment. Instead, they raise technical questions about safety procedures, equipment condition, and how operations were controlled at the time.
In Huntington, that commonly shows up in workplace and industrial settings tied to:
- Manufacturing and fabrication work (pressing, clamping, conveyors, material handling)
- Distribution and warehouse loading (forklifts, dock equipment, pallet movement)
- Construction and industrial maintenance (staging, lift/hoist operations, pinch-point hazards)
When insurers get involved, they often argue that the injury was unavoidable, that the employee “should have been more careful,” or that the medical issues don’t match the incident. That’s why a real attorney’s job is to tie your medical evidence to the accident facts—and to do it using documentation that may disappear quickly.


