Life-altering injury

The immediate injury is only the beginning of the case.

A catastrophic-injury claim must account for future medical care, earning capacity, independence, and the effect on a family. Michael develops the evidence required to show both present harm and lifelong consequence.

Project the consequences beyond the immediate injury.

The claim must translate medical reality into a credible account of future care, lost capacity, adaptive needs, and diminished independence. That requires coordinated medical, vocational, economic, and day-in-the-life evidence—not a snapshot of the first months after the event.

Long-term consequences to document

  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Spinal cord injury
  • Amputation
  • Permanent impairment
  • Complex orthopedic trauma

The working method

  1. 01Preserve

    Protect the records, testimony, data, and physical evidence that can disappear.

  2. 02Prove

    Build causation and damages through documents, experts, and a coherent theory of the case.

  3. 03Position

    Prepare the matter so negotiation is backed by credible trial risk.

Related result

Multiple fractures and six months away from work

A reported $1 million judgment for a single father seriously injured in a motor-vehicle collision.

$1M

Catastrophic Injury

Build the future-loss analysis before the claim is undervalued.