In Dolton, many catastrophic injuries involve roadway collisions and high-stress commuting patterns—drivers speeding up to merge, sudden lane changes, distracted driving, and stop-and-go traffic. When paralysis is caused by a crash, the strongest claims typically depend on details that insurance companies may try to minimize.
That’s why early evidence matters. Things like:
- traffic control conditions and lane layout at the time of impact
- vehicle damage patterns and restraint/seatbelt issues
- witness observations from nearby traffic
- video recordings from nearby devices when available
- the medical timeline linking the event to neurological decline
When paralysis follows an accident, the defense often argues about timing, pre-existing conditions, or whether the injury “truly caused” the deficits. Your legal strategy should be built to address those arguments from the start.


