In and around Monroe, catastrophic injuries frequently happen in situations where evidence can disappear quickly—surveillance footage gets overwritten, witnesses move on, and incident details get lost while you’re at the hospital.
Paralysis also changes the way a claim must be built. Your case needs to reflect not only the initial trauma, but the real-life functional impact that develops over time—mobility limitations, ongoing treatment, home/work adjustments, and long-term care needs.
The sooner a lawyer starts organizing the facts, the better your chances of connecting the incident to the medical record and preserving what insurers will later dispute.


