Injuries that lead to paralysis require proof of three things: what happened, why it caused the neurological damage, and what the injury will cost over time.
In Adrian, common incident environments can make early evidence especially important:
- Commuter routes where sudden braking, lane changes, and reduced visibility can matter
- Intersections where witnesses may leave quickly and traffic camera footage can overwrite
- Weather transitions in Michigan—ice, wet roads, and fog can complicate fault and causation
- Construction and roadwork that can affect sightlines, signage, and lane control
A paralysis claim can’t be built only on what people remember. It needs records—medical and factual—captured while details are still available.


