In North Texas, many injuries happen in the rhythm of everyday commuting—sudden braking on highways, lane changes, intersection impacts, and rear-end collisions that seem “minor” at first. Defense teams often argue that symptoms didn’t match the crash, that treatment was delayed, or that the injury is unrelated to the incident.
That’s why your early paperwork matters in Keller cases:
- Who reported the crash and when (and what was written down)
- Whether you sought treatment quickly enough to show a continuous medical story
- What your clinicians documented about pain, function, and limitations
- Whether the incident details align with the injury mechanism
Even if you feel pain right away, insurance may still challenge causation. Your job is to get care and keep evidence; your lawyer’s job is to build a claim that can survive scrutiny.


