Kenosha residents commonly face high-stakes injuries in situations like:
- Commuting collisions on I-94 and nearby connectors, where speed and traffic flow complicate liability.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents near busy corridors, where visibility, timing, and warning systems can be disputed.
- Intersection crashes where lane control, turns, and signal timing become critical.
- Motorcycle and bicycle wrecks around residential and commercial areas, where injury severity can escalate quickly.
- Construction and detour zones that create sudden changes to driving patterns and sightlines.
In these cases, paralysis damages aren’t just medical—they’re practical. A serious injury can mean mobility changes, in-home care needs, vehicle modifications, and long-term therapy. The legal strategy must reflect what paralysis actually does to daily life in Wisconsin, not just what happened in the moment.


