Many TBI cases in the area start with something that doesn’t immediately look “serious” on the scene—especially when symptoms develop later. Common scenarios include:
- Rear-end collisions and sudden stops during commuting hours, where head impact may not be obvious but whiplash and concussion symptoms can follow.
- Pedestrian and crosswalk incidents (including older adults and people distracted by phones or weather conditions), where the severity of impact becomes a central evidence question.
- Trips and falls at retail centers, apartment common areas, or workplaces—where head impact can occur even after a “minor” fall.
- Parking lot collisions and low-speed impacts, which can still produce significant neurological symptoms.
In these situations, the settlement value often turns on whether the record shows:
- how the injury likely occurred,
- what symptoms were documented, and
- how those symptoms affected real life (work, driving, sleep, cognition, mood).


