After a scaffolding fall, the first fight is usually not medical. It’s factual. Evidence disappears quickly when a site is cleaned, equipment is returned, and reports get rewritten into final “incident summaries.” In Bentonville, that matters because many projects move on tight timelines—meaning documentation can be incomplete if you wait.
Before you speak with anyone in a recorded setting, focus on:
- Medical documentation: go to urgent care/ER or your physician promptly, and follow up as recommended.
- Scene details: if you can, write down what you remember about the scaffold setup, access points, guardrails, and how you were working.
- Who controlled the area: identify the company managing the work that day (general contractor, subcontractor, or property maintenance provider).
Then, let a lawyer review what’s been filed and what’s missing—because in scaffolding cases, the strongest claims are built on what the jobsite was supposed to do and what it actually did.


