After a catastrophic injury, people understandably focus on treatment. But in paralysis cases, insurers frequently move quickly to investigate and to limit exposure. In the Fridley area, that means your case can depend on details that are easy to lose:
- Crash scene documentation (photos, skid marks, vehicle positions, visible hazards)
- Witness accounts from nearby drivers or bystanders who may not follow up later
- Medical timeline clarity showing what was injured, when symptoms were documented, and how care decisions were made
- Work and attendance records when the injury happened on the job or disrupted medical leave
A paralysis injury lawyer doesn’t just “collect documents.” The goal is to build a claim that matches the reality of your injury and the way Minnesota claims are evaluated—so the other side can’t shrink the story into something smaller than what happened.


