Suffered a Brain Injury Due to Someone’s Negligence?
A Brain Injury Changes Everything —
For the Victim and for the Whole Family.
Traumatic brain injuries are among the most serious — and most misunderstood — consequences of personal injury accidents. A car crash, a fall, a blow to the head that seemed minor at the time. Symptoms can take days or weeks to fully appear, and by then the insurance company may have already moved to close the case for far less than it’s worth.
I’ve worked with TBI victims and their families across California, Florida, Texas, Nevada, Colorado, and New York. What strikes me every time is how invisible these injuries can be to the outside world — while the person living with them is struggling with memory loss, personality changes, chronic pain, and an inability to work or care for themselves the way they used to. The long-term costs are enormous, and they deserve to be fully accounted for.
If you or someone you love has suffered a brain injury because of another person’s negligence, please don’t settle — in any sense of the word — before talking to me first.
Common Causes of Traumatic Brain Injury Claims
Car, Truck, and Motorcycle Accidents
Vehicle collisions are the leading cause of traumatic brain injuries. The force of impact — even with airbags — can cause severe and lasting neurological damage.
Slip, Trip, and Fall Accidents
A fall on a wet floor, an uneven sidewalk, or a poorly maintained staircase can result in a serious head injury. Property owners can and should be held accountable.
Sports and Recreational Accidents
Negligently supervised activities, defective equipment, or reckless conduct by others can cause TBIs in sporting and recreational settings. Waivers don’t always hold up.
Workplace Accidents
Falls from height, struck-by incidents, construction accidents — brain injuries on the job can involve workers’ compensation and third-party negligence claims simultaneously.
Assault and Intentional Acts
A brain injury caused by a deliberate act of violence can support both criminal charges and a separate civil personal injury claim against the responsible party.
Medical Negligence
Surgical errors, anesthesia mistakes, oxygen deprivation during a procedure — brain injuries caused by medical malpractice are among the most complex and consequential cases we handle.
7 Steps That Protect Your Claim
Brain injury cases are built on medical documentation, expert testimony, and a clear record of how the injury has affected every part of the victim’s life. Here’s what matters most in the days and weeks after the accident.
Seek Emergency Medical Care Immediately
Any head injury — even one that seems mild — warrants immediate medical evaluation. Concussions, subdural hematomas, and diffuse axonal injuries can all worsen rapidly without treatment. Don’t wait to see how you feel in the morning.
Follow Every Medical Recommendation
Attend every appointment, follow every treatment plan, and see every specialist you’re referred to. Gaps in your medical care are one of the first things insurance companies use to argue that your injury isn’t as serious as you claim.
Document the Accident Scene
If you’re physically able — or a family member can do this — photograph the location, the hazard or vehicle involved, any contributing conditions, and anything else relevant to how the injury occurred.
Keep a Symptom and Daily Impact Journal
Brain injury symptoms — headaches, cognitive fog, mood changes, memory problems, sleep disruption — can be difficult to quantify. A daily journal documenting how you feel and what you can no longer do is powerful evidence of your non-economic losses.
Get Witness and Accident Information
Names, contact information, insurance details, and any official report numbers. If a family member is managing this on your behalf while you recover, ask them to handle this step as soon as possible.
Don’t Give Statements to Insurance Companies
This is especially critical in brain injury cases. Cognitive changes from a TBI can affect how you recall and describe events — and insurers will use inconsistencies in your statements against you. Speak to an attorney before speaking to anyone else.
Don’t Accept Any Settlement Before You Know Your Full Prognosis
Brain injury outcomes can take months or even years to fully understand. Accepting a settlement before your doctors have a clear picture of your long-term needs could leave you with nothing to cover future care. Please call us before signing anything.
Brain Injury Claims Must Account for
a Lifetime of Impact — Not Just Today’s Bills.
This is where brain injury cases are fundamentally different from most other personal injury claims. The costs don’t stop when you leave the hospital. Ongoing therapy, specialist care, cognitive rehabilitation, lost career trajectory, the support a family member has to provide — these are real, ongoing, and often permanent losses that demand full and proper valuation.
In states where our firm is licensed — California, Colorado, Florida, Nevada, New York, and Texas — traumatic brain injury victims may be entitled to:
- Emergency and ongoing medical expenses
- Long-term rehabilitation and specialist care
- Lost wages and loss of future earning capacity
- In-home care and assistance costs
- Pain, suffering, and emotional distress
- Loss of quality of life and personal relationships
Every case is different. Let’s sit down — free of charge — and I’ll give you an honest picture of what yours is worth.
Upfront. Always.
No Win, No Fee — Period.
You’re already dealing with enough. Our contingency fee model means we only get paid when you do. There’s no financial risk to getting the legal help you need right now.
Brain Injury Claim FAQ
What’s the difference between a mild TBI and a severe TBI for legal purposes?
What if symptoms didn’t appear until days or weeks after the accident?
The insurance company says my brain injury is „pre-existing.” What do I do?
Can a family member file a claim on behalf of a brain injury victim?
How long do brain injury cases typically take?
How long do I have to file a brain injury claim?
Do you handle brain injury cases in my state?
Let’s Talk — Free, No Pressure,
No Obligation.
I know reaching out to an attorney can feel like a big step. It doesn’t have to be. Tell me what happened, and I’ll give you an honest picture of your options — no judgment, no sales pitch, just real guidance.
Available in English and Polish · No fees unless we win
