Quincy is a working river city with busy commuting routes, frequent construction activity, and a mix of residential streets and high-traffic corridors. That matters because paralysis claims are typically fought on what happened first and what the medical record shows next.
In many local cases, critical evidence is only available for a short window—such as:
- photos/video from the scene taken before it’s cleaned up or repaired
- witness observations while memories are fresh (especially near intersections and busy sidewalks)
- employer incident logs and safety documentation
- surveillance footage from nearby businesses or public areas
A paralysis injury case can’t be built on assumptions. The strongest claims are assembled quickly and methodically, using a fact pattern that matches both the incident reports and the medical timeline.


