Paralysis injuries often occur in moments that happen fast—rear-end collisions, chain-reaction crashes, pedestrian impacts, and worksite incidents near busy corridors. In White Plains, insurers frequently begin their investigation quickly and may attempt to frame the story early.
In practice, that means:
- Video and traffic evidence can disappear if you don’t act quickly (dash cams, nearby security systems, and temporary footage retention).
- Medical timelines matter more than people expect—documentation gaps can be used to argue the injury is unrelated or less severe.
- Comparative fault arguments are common in New York, especially when an opposing side claims the injured person contributed to the crash.
A paralysis injury lawyer’s job is to translate what happened into evidence that holds up—so the claim is valued based on the long-term impact, not just the initial hospitalization.


