Cary’s suburban layout means many residents commute through a network of busy corridors and cross-traffic points where serious crashes can happen. When paralysis is caused by a collision, the case often turns on details like:
- Traffic control issues (turn lanes, signal timing, signage visibility)
- Road condition and markings (weather-related visibility, resurfacing, debris)
- Construction-adjacent driving risks (lane shifts, temporary barriers, altered routes)
Even when the crash seems obvious, insurers may dispute causation or argue that something else—like a pre-existing condition—contributed to the paralysis. In Cary-area cases, that’s why early evidence preservation (before it’s lost or overwritten) is critical.


