In the Parkersburg area, serious injuries commonly involve commuting corridors, highway merges, and intersections where traffic patterns change quickly. When paralysis results, the difference between a strong claim and a weak one often comes down to what can be shown about:
- how the incident happened (not just what happened)
- whether traffic control, road conditions, or vehicle issues played a role
- what medical findings connect the event to the neurological damage
Because paralysis cases involve immediate and long-term consequences, the early investigation step is critical. Evidence can disappear fast—surveillance loops overwrite, vehicles are repaired or moved, skid marks fade, and witnesses forget details.
A local lawyer’s job is to help ensure the case is built while key information is still available—so the injury story doesn’t rely on assumptions.


