Paralysis cases are often “high stakes, long timeline” matters. The injury may change over days or weeks as swelling, imaging results, and neurological findings become clear. That means early decisions—medical documentation, communications with insurers, and preserving evidence—can have an outsized impact.
In a coastal area like Somers Point, common real-world scenarios include:
- Road incidents on Route 9 and nearby corridors, including sudden braking, lane changes, and limited visibility at certain times of day
- Pedestrian and bicycle crashes involving tourists, families, and event crowds
- Premises hazards where wet surfaces, uneven walkways, or inadequate warning can contribute to catastrophic falls
- Construction and maintenance work where safety procedures and equipment issues can be central to liability
When paralysis occurs, insurers may focus on what they believe is “temporary” or “pre-existing,” or they may argue the injury wasn’t caused by the incident. Your job isn’t to win the argument alone. Your job is to preserve facts; your lawyer’s job is to turn those facts into a case theory that holds up.


