In the Sanger area, serious injuries commonly occur on routes people rely on every day—commutes, freight and service traffic, and intersections where traffic patterns can shift quickly due to construction, detours, or changing traffic signals.
In paralysis cases, the difference between a strong claim and a weak one often comes down to whether key proof is preserved early, including:
- Medical records that document neurological status (not just pain)
- Imaging reports and surgical notes
- Incident reports and scene documentation
- Witness information while memories are still fresh
- Vehicle/scene evidence when available (especially in traffic collisions)
When paralysis is involved, delays can make it harder to connect the accident to the long-term impairment. The goal is to document the injury’s path—not only the moment it happened.


