When a crush injury involves equipment or work processes, the evidence can disappear quickly—machines get repaired, logs get overwritten, and surveillance footage may be retained for a limited time.
Do these things first:
- Go to urgent care or ER and ask for a full evaluation. Crush injuries can involve internal damage, fractures, nerve issues, and delayed complications.
- Tell the treating provider exactly what happened (as best you can) and where the pressure/pinning occurred.
- Request the incident report number and keep a copy.
- Preserve proof: photos of the scene/equipment if you can do so safely; names of supervisors/witnesses; dates of follow-up appointments.
- Be careful with statements to employers and insurers. In New Jersey, what you say early can be used to challenge causation or severity.
If you’re worried about how to organize everything, a lawyer can help you build a clean, chronological case file—without you trying to interpret legal significance on your own.


