In South El Monte, many serious injuries involve people who spend a lot of time on the road—commuting to work, dropping kids off, or running errands. In these situations, insurers commonly argue one of two things:
- Your symptoms weren’t tied to the incident (or they started too late)
- The injury is less severe than you claim because imaging doesn’t “match” your pain
That’s why your case needs a clear sequence: what happened, when symptoms began, when you sought care, what clinicians documented, and how your function changed (work, daily tasks, sleep, mobility).
Even when the injury is real, gaps can give the defense leverage. A strong attorney record-review approach helps keep the narrative consistent and medically supported.


