Crush cases tend to hinge on details: which machine or area was involved, what safety steps were required, and whether those steps were actually followed. On an island community, the reality is that:
- Smaller employers and contractors may have fewer formal processes, meaning records (training logs, maintenance notes, incident reports) can be incomplete or harder to obtain later.
- Marine-adjacent and logistics work (loading, hauling, dock activity, equipment transfer) can involve hazards that don’t look like “factory” accidents but still create serious compression injuries.
- Tourism and event schedules can lead to faster timelines for repairs and cleanup—sometimes before evidence is preserved.
Because of this, the first days after a crush injury can be the difference between a case that’s well-supported and one insurers try to minimize.


