Reading sits just off major commuting routes, and many serious injuries come from predictable patterns: fast merges, traffic turning into cross-traffic, limited sightlines near roads with heavy flow, and crashes where vehicles move quickly out of position.
In paralysis cases, the difference between a strong and weak claim can be whether key proof is secured early—for example:
- dash-cam or dash-mounted phone footage from vehicles involved in the crash
- surveillance footage from nearby businesses or traffic-adjacent cameras
- scene photographs (skid marks, debris fields, vehicle positions) taken before cleanup
- witness contact information before people move on
When paralysis occurs, insurers may try to frame the injury as unrelated, pre-existing, or the result of delayed care. That’s why local fact-gathering matters: the longer evidence is left unattended, the harder it is to reconstruct.


