Meridian’s daily traffic patterns can increase the risk of high-impact crashes—especially during rush hours on major corridors and during periods of heavy travel toward Boise and surrounding areas.
In paralysis cases, liability frequently depends on details like:
- Lighting conditions and visibility at the time of the crash
- Speed and stopping distance—including roadway surface and weather factors
- Lane control, turn signals, and traffic control devices
- Driver attention evidence (and whether it was preserved)
- Vehicle damage patterns that can support the mechanism of injury
Those facts matter because paralysis injuries are often tied to how the spine was stressed—compression, impact, or destabilization. The defense may argue an intervening cause, pre-existing conditions, or that the accident didn’t cause the specific neurological damage.
Our job is to build a record that connects what happened on the road to what the medical team documented afterward.


