In Cheney, serious crashes and workplace incidents can happen quickly—especially during busy commuting hours, winter road conditions, and construction seasons. After a catastrophic injury, the most valuable details can disappear just as quickly: surveillance footage gets overwritten, medical providers document symptoms inconsistently across visits, and incident narratives evolve.
A paralysis claim is usually won or lost on causation (what caused the paralysis) and severity (how the injury affects you over time). That means the first weeks matter. Your attorney can help you:
- preserve incident evidence (photos, crash reports, witness info, jobsite records)
- organize medical records into a timeline that insurers and defense teams can’t easily distort
- identify missing documentation that could be crucial for proving how the injury occurred
Technology can help organize facts, but it can’t replace legal strategy. The goal is to turn information into a coherent claim plan that fits Washington law and the specific facts of what happened.


