In central Maine, paralysis cases often involve evidence that can disappear quickly—traffic camera footage, witness availability, jobsite logs, maintenance records, and early medical notes.
After an injury, it’s common for people to focus on immediate stabilization and forget details that later become critical, such as:
- the exact location conditions (lighting, weather, road debris, steps/entrances)
- how quickly symptoms were recognized and documented
- what was said during early insurance communications
- whether follow-up imaging and specialist evaluations occurred on schedule
A paralysis claim can also involve evolving medical findings. An attorney’s job is to make sure your evidence supports the full story—not just what was obvious on day one.


