In Palo Alto, severe injuries often follow high-speed crashes on regional corridors, collisions involving distracted driving, or pedestrian and bicycle incidents where someone has little time to react. Regardless of how it happened, paralysis cases hinge on documentation—because insurers often scrutinize causation and delay paying until they believe the record “matches their story.”
A paralysis claim typically depends on three proof pillars:
- What happened (the incident timeline and conditions)
- What the injury is (neurological findings and diagnosis)
- How the incident caused or aggravated it (medical causation)
In practice, the most valuable evidence may be time-sensitive: dashcam footage, traffic camera data, incident reports, witness identifications, and early medical notes that capture symptoms and deficits.
The advantage of working with a lawyer early: you avoid losing critical details while you’re focused on stabilization and treatment.


