Every case turns on facts, but the patterns in and around Liberty Lake tend to look like:
1) Warehouse and loading accidents
Crush injuries often occur during loading/unloading when a person is caught between:
- forklifts or dock equipment and fixed structures,
- pallets, skids, or stacked materials,
- rolling loads and staging barriers.
These cases frequently involve safety procedures, training records, and maintenance history—especially where gates, restraints, or dock components are involved.
2) Construction and industrial staging
On job sites, crush injuries can happen when:
- materials shift unexpectedly,
- braces/rigging fail or are used incorrectly,
- someone is pinned while moving or securing heavy components.
We look closely at whether the job was planned and supervised safely, and whether required safeguards were actually in place.
3) Equipment-related pinning and entrapment
If a press, conveyor, lift, or other machine caught a worker, the questions usually include:
- were guards removed or bypassed,
- were lockout/tagout steps followed,
- did the equipment have known defects or overdue service.
This is where evidence can become technical quickly—photos, logs, and machine condition matter.
4) Driver and logistics collisions involving compression forces
Crush injuries aren’t always “inside a factory.” They can also follow vehicle-related events where a person is compressed between a vehicle and a barrier, another vehicle, or cargo.
Those cases often involve multiple parties and insurance policies, so early investigation is essential.