Blythe sits along major travel corridors, and many serious injuries involve high-speed impacts, long sight distances, and complex crash circumstances—especially where a vehicle’s speed, braking, lane positioning, lighting, or roadway conditions are disputed.
In paralysis cases, the “what happened” question is not just relevant—it can determine whether liability is clear or heavily contested. That’s why early evidence matters:
- Crash scene documentation (photos, measurements, and statements)
- Driver and vehicle information (including logs, maintenance issues, and damage patterns)
- Timing details (when symptoms appeared and how quickly emergency care started)
- Medical record continuity linking the incident to the neurological injury
An AI-enabled intake process can help assemble these items into a timeline quickly. But the case still needs attorney review to determine what evidence is legally persuasive and what gaps must be filled.


