Owasso residents spend a lot of time driving—commuting to work, dropping kids off, and traveling around the Tulsa metro. Catastrophic spinal injuries can occur in many ways: high-speed collisions, rear-end crashes with sudden impact, intersection incidents, and single-vehicle events where roadway hazards or visibility issues may be factors.
In these cases, the legal fight often turns on reconstructing the crash accurately and proving that the accident—not something else—caused or worsened paralysis. That requires careful attention to:
- The crash timeline (who saw what, when)
- Traffic control and lane conditions
- Vehicle damage and occupant dynamics
- Early medical findings that document neurological deficits
If you’ve been told “it’s complicated,” that usually means the other side is trying to create doubt. Your claim should be built to reduce that uncertainty.


