Many catastrophic paralysis injuries in the area occur during the moments people assume are “routine”: driving in traffic, crossing busy streets, traveling through commercial corridors, or working around heavy equipment. When a spinal cord injury happens, the earliest evidence is often the difference between a claim that moves forward and one that gets tangled in disputes about what caused the injury.
After a paralysis injury, insurers may try to slow things down by questioning timing, medical causation, or how the injury occurred. That’s why the early phase matters: what was documented at the scene, what the medical record shows, and whether key details are preserved before they vanish.


