In California, the biggest risk after a construction injury isn’t just the injury itself—it’s what happens in the days after.
Common ways cases derail:
- Recorded statements or “we just need to clarify” calls that pressure you to describe what happened before you understand the full extent of your injuries.
- Inconsistent timelines between what you remember, what witnesses say, and what gets written in internal incident reports.
- Evidence gaps when the job site is cleaned up, scaffolding is removed, and documentation is retained only in the contractor’s systems.
For people in Rancho Mirage, this is often compounded by how quickly projects shift. Materials move, crews rotate, and the site changes—so the factual record can disappear sooner than you’d expect.


