In our experience handling dog bite and animal attack matters in the Rio Grande Valley, claims often hinge on a few repeatable issues:
- Whether the bite happened in a place tied to the owner’s control (home yard, driveway, or a nearby area where the dog was kept/managed).
- Whether the incident was documented early (photos, medical intake notes, witness accounts).
- How consistently the injury is described across ER/urgent care records, follow-up visits, and any later statements.
- Whether the dog owner’s knowledge matters—for example, if there were prior incidents, complaints, or warnings.
Because Raymondville has busy residential neighborhoods and family-heavy routines—school drop-offs, neighborhood walks, and visitors coming and going—insurers sometimes argue the incident was “unexpected.” That’s why early evidence and clear medical records matter.


