In a place like Colleyville, many serious injuries happen on routes commuters use every day—during rush hours, around intersections, or when visibility and driving conditions change quickly. When paralysis is involved, the difference between a claim that moves forward and one that stalls often comes down to whether key evidence is preserved early.
A lawyer can help you focus on what typically matters most for catastrophic outcomes:
- Emergency documentation: what was said and recorded at the scene and in the ER (diagnosis, suspected cause, neurological findings)
- Imaging and surgical records: MRIs, CT scans, operative notes, and follow-up assessments
- Witness and scene details: who saw what, where they were, traffic conditions, lighting/weather, and any lane/turn issues
- Defendant information: insurance details, employer/site information, and any relevant maintenance or safety records (when applicable)
The goal isn’t just to “collect papers.” It’s to build a clear causation story—how the incident connects to the paralysis—and to prevent gaps that insurers often exploit.


