Catastrophic paralysis claims are rarely won on emotion alone. In Clayton, as in the rest of Missouri, what matters most is the paper trail that connects:
- what happened (the incident),
- how the injury occurred (medical causation), and
- what the paralysis will require next (long-term impact).
Many people don’t realize that the first days after injury are when key evidence can disappear—dash cam footage gets overwritten, witnesses move on, and medical records get fragmented across facilities.
That’s why a paralysis injury case needs structured organization early—so your story is consistent, your medical timeline is complete, and your claim doesn’t get undervalued because something important wasn’t requested in time.


