Dixon residents spend a lot of time on the road—on commutes to nearby workplaces, school drop-offs, and weekend travel. Catastrophic injuries in these situations can involve:
- Rear-end and multi-vehicle collisions where braking distance, speed, and lane positioning matter
- Intersection crashes where signal timing, turning behavior, and visibility are disputed
- High-speed roadway injuries where insurers may argue the forces were not “enough” to cause lasting neurological damage
When paralysis is involved, the case usually hinges on documenting how the impact occurred and tying it to the medical findings. A “fast settlement” approach can backfire if the defense later argues causation is unclear—especially before imaging, neurologic exams, and follow-up assessments are fully documented.


