Many catastrophic injuries in the Bryan–College Station area happen during peak travel windows—school runs, shift changes, and weekend traffic around entertainment and campus events. When paralysis results, the difference between a strong claim and a weak one can come down to details that disappear quickly:
- dashcam and traffic-camera footage before it’s overwritten
- collision reconstruction facts (impact angle, speed indicators, roadway markings)
- witness availability (people move on fast after a crash)
- medical documentation that must link the accident to spinal injury and long-term impairment
A paralysis case is not only about what happened—it’s about proving how and why it happened, and connecting that to the medical record with credibility.


