Paralysis cases are unusually evidence-dependent because the severity and permanence of neurological injury must be tied to a specific event. After a serious collision—whether on a roadway near the commercial strip, during a commute, or involving a pedestrian—insurers may argue that the injury is unrelated, delayed, or exaggerated.
In practice, that means your case can turn on details like:
- The exact crash sequence (what happened first and why)
- Lighting, visibility, and speed conditions at the time
- Vehicle and restraint information (including any mechanical factors)
- Timelines between the crash and emergency treatment
- Consistency between witness accounts and the medical record
Because paralysis affects long-term care needs, you want an attorney who understands how to translate crash facts into a clear, insurer-ready theory of liability and damages.


