In a small city, the details of an incident can disappear quickly—dash cams get overwritten, witnesses move on, and surveillance footage (when it exists) may only be retained for a short window.
That’s why “fast” doesn’t mean guesswork. It means acting quickly to preserve what matters most in catastrophic injury claims, such as:
- Emergency and transport records (EMS reports, hospital intake notes, imaging results)
- Chronology of symptoms (what you felt immediately vs. what was documented later)
- Workplace or premises documentation (safety logs, incident reports, maintenance records)
- Local scene evidence (photos, measurements, and identification of traffic controls or hazards)
When paralysis is involved, insurers often scrutinize timelines—so the strongest cases are the ones where the record is organized early and tied to objective medical findings.


