In and around Secaucus, burn incidents may involve multiple parties—employers, property managers, contractors, equipment suppliers, or building maintenance personnel. That complexity matters because insurers frequently argue over who controlled the hazard and what safety steps were required.
After a burn, evidence tends to get lost quickly: footage is overwritten, maintenance logs are hard to obtain later, and the “story” of the incident becomes harder to reconstruct once treatment ramps up. If you want a settlement that reflects the real impact of your injuries, the claim should be grounded in:
- Medical records showing burn depth, treatment course, and prognosis
- Photos taken soon after the incident (and later if scarring develops)
- Incident reporting from the location where the burn occurred
- Witness accounts (especially for workplace and building-related incidents)
- Proof of financial impact (time off, prescriptions, travel for treatment)


