In suburban Chicago-south areas like Lansing, many catastrophic injuries happen on routes people know by heart—during rush-hour commutes, school-day drop-offs, and evening travel when visibility and traffic flow can change quickly.
When paralysis occurs, insurers often try to move fast: they may contact you early, request a recorded statement, or suggest that the injury is “temporary” or “pre-existing.” The challenge is that paralysis cases can evolve and require careful documentation.
The first goal is protecting evidence before it disappears—dashcam footage, traffic camera data, witness observations, employer accident logs, and the medical record that connects the incident to the neurologic damage.


