Brain injuries represent some of the most serious and life-altering damages a person can sustain. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we understand the profound impact traumatic brain injuries have on victims and their families. Whether caused by vehicle accidents, workplace incidents, or other negligent acts, brain injuries demand immediate legal attention and compassionate representation. Our team in North Creek, Washington provides thorough advocacy for individuals facing the physical, emotional, and financial consequences of brain trauma.
Brain injuries create complex liability and damages questions that require skilled legal guidance. Insurance companies often underestimate the long-term costs of brain injury recovery, including cognitive rehabilitation, behavioral therapy, and adaptive equipment. Our legal team fights to ensure your compensation reflects the true scope of your needs. We handle investigation, settlement negotiation, and litigation with the goal of securing resources for your medical care, household modifications, and future security. Having competent representation protects your rights during a vulnerable time.
A brain injury claim encompasses the legal process of establishing negligence, proving causation, and quantifying damages. Brain injuries range from concussions to diffuse axonal injury, each presenting unique recovery challenges and long-term effects. Your case must document how another party’s negligence caused your injury, whether through motor vehicle accidents, falls, workplace incidents, or other preventable circumstances. We gather medical records, accident reports, witness testimony, and expert opinions to build a compelling narrative of how the injury occurred and its lasting impact on your life.
A traumatic brain injury occurs when external force damages brain tissue and disrupts normal brain function. TBI can range from mild concussions to severe injuries causing permanent disability, consciousness loss, or death. These injuries affect cognitive function, memory, balance, vision, and emotional regulation depending on the injury location and severity.
Liability establishes legal responsibility for causing injury through negligent, reckless, or intentional conduct. In brain injury cases, proving liability requires demonstrating that a defendant owed you a duty of care, breached that duty, and caused your injury. This foundation determines whether you have a viable claim for compensation.
Negligence refers to failure to exercise reasonable care that a prudent person would exercise, resulting in harm. In personal injury cases, negligence requires proof of duty, breach, causation, and damages. Most brain injuries result from negligent actions such as distracted driving, unsafe workplace conditions, or inadequate property maintenance.
Damages represent the monetary compensation awarded to injured parties to cover losses resulting from injury. Economic damages cover medical bills and lost wages, while non-economic damages address pain, suffering, and reduced quality of life. In severe brain injury cases, damages can be substantial and long-lasting.
Even mild head impacts warrant professional medical assessment, as brain injuries sometimes show delayed symptoms. Emergency room evaluation creates documentation that strengthens your legal case. Prompt medical attention protects both your health and your ability to pursue compensation later.
Document the accident scene through photographs, video, and written descriptions while details remain fresh. Keep all medical records, treatment receipts, therapy notes, and communications with insurance companies. This evidence becomes critical when establishing liability and demonstrating the injury’s impact on your life.
Time limits apply to personal injury claims, making early legal consultation essential. An attorney can immediately advise you on protecting your rights and securing necessary documentation. Quick action prevents evidence loss and ensures compliance with filing deadlines.
Significant brain injuries involving cognitive impairment, physical disability, or personality changes demand full legal advocacy to secure adequate compensation. These injuries require extensive medical documentation, life care planning, and vocational assessment. Comprehensive representation ensures damages account for decades of potential care needs and lost opportunities.
When liability is contested or insurance coverage is questionable, full legal resources become critical. Investigation, expert testimony, and litigation readiness protect your interests against aggressive defense strategies. Comprehensive advocacy addresses liability disputes while pursuing every available compensation source.
Simple concussions with straightforward recovery and minimal ongoing treatment sometimes resolve through limited legal action. When medical expenses are modest and the injury’s impact is temporary, streamlined negotiation may achieve fair settlement. Medical evidence clearly establishing causation makes these cases more straightforward to resolve.
When the responsible party’s liability is clear and insurance companies acknowledge coverage without dispute, negotiation-focused representation often suffices. Cooperative insurers may move quickly toward settlement when facts support the claim. However, even in these situations, legal guidance ensures fair compensation evaluation.
Vehicle collisions frequently cause brain injuries through impact, acceleration-deceleration forces, or secondary trauma. Our attorneys handle car, truck, and motorcycle accident cases involving head injuries throughout Snohomish County.
Construction sites, falls from heights, and equipment-related accidents often result in traumatic brain injuries. Beyond workers’ compensation, third-party negligence claims may provide additional recovery for serious brain injuries.
Slip-and-fall accidents, inadequate security, and unsafe building conditions cause brain injuries that warrant legal action. Property owners’ negligence in maintaining safe premises creates liability when injuries result.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd combines extensive personal injury litigation experience with genuine compassion for brain injury victims and families. Our North Creek-based team understands local Snohomish County courts, judges, and insurance company practices. We provide personalized attention to each case, investing time in understanding your medical condition, family situation, and long-term needs. This client-centered approach, paired with aggressive advocacy, positions us to pursue maximum compensation while supporting your recovery journey.
We handle all aspects of brain injury cases from initial investigation through settlement or trial. Our relationships with medical professionals, rehabilitation centers, and vocational assessment specialists strengthen your case. We manage communication with insurance companies, allowing you to focus on healing rather than legal proceedings. With contingency fee arrangements, you pay no upfront costs—we succeed only when you receive compensation. Contact us at 253-544-5434 for a confidential consultation about your brain injury claim.
Washington law provides a three-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims, including brain injuries. This means you must file a lawsuit within three years of the injury date. However, this deadline can sometimes be extended in specific circumstances, such as when the injury is discovered later or involves a minor. It’s crucial to contact an attorney well before this deadline expires. Early consultation allows us to gather evidence, medical documentation, and expert opinions while memories and physical evidence remain available. Waiting until near the deadline limits our investigative abilities and strengthens opposing parties’ negotiation positions. We recommend calling 253-544-5434 as soon as possible after your injury occurs.
Brain injury compensation includes economic damages covering medical treatment, hospitalization, rehabilitation, ongoing therapy, assistive equipment, home modifications, and lost wages. Non-economic damages address pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and reduced quality of life. In cases involving permanent disability or cognitive impairment, damages account for decades of future care needs and diminished earning capacity. Calculating appropriate compensation requires thorough understanding of medical prognosis, long-term care requirements, and vocational impact. Life care planning and economic projections help demonstrate the full scope of financial needs. Our attorneys work with medical professionals to ensure compensation reflects the injury’s true lifetime impact rather than underestimating ongoing care costs.
Establishing liability requires proving that the defendant owed you a duty of care, breached that duty through negligent or careless conduct, directly caused your brain injury, and caused measurable damages. The specific duty depends on the circumstances—drivers owe other motorists reasonable care on roadways, property owners owe visitors safe premises, and employers owe employees safe working conditions. Proof of breach involves showing the defendant failed to exercise the care a reasonable person would exercise. In brain injury cases, causation requires medical evidence linking the defendant’s conduct to your specific injury. Investigation, accident reconstruction, witness testimony, and medical documentation build a compelling liability case. Insurance companies will challenge these elements, making skilled legal representation essential.
Brain injuries are uniquely complex because symptoms are sometimes invisible initially and develop over time. Unlike broken bones with clear X-ray evidence, brain injuries require sophisticated medical testing and ongoing documentation. Cognitive, behavioral, and emotional changes can be subtle but profoundly impact daily functioning, employment, relationships, and independence. Insurance companies often underestimate brain injury severity because physical signs are absent. This requires medical expertise to prove the injury’s reality and long-term consequences. Additionally, brain injuries affect each person differently depending on the injury location, severity, and individual factors. Life expectancy, cognitive recovery potential, and long-term prognosis require individualized analysis. These complexities demand attorneys who understand both neurology and insurance company defense tactics.
Initial settlement offers from insurance companies rarely reflect the true value of brain injury claims, especially when the injury’s full impact isn’t yet apparent. Early offers are often designed to close the claim before comprehensive medical assessment reveals long-term needs. Accepting inadequate settlement prevents you from seeking additional compensation later, even if your condition worsens or unexpected complications arise. Let an attorney evaluate any settlement offer before accepting it. We’ll consider your medical prognosis, treatment needs, lost earning capacity, and quality-of-life impacts. Sometimes negotiating further yields significantly higher settlements without requiring litigation. Insurance companies know that skilled representation increases their exposure, motivating better offers. Never accept settlement without professional legal review.
A concussion is a type of traumatic brain injury caused by impact or rapid head movement that temporarily affects brain function. Concussions are usually milder than other TBIs and often resolve with rest and gradual activity return. However, repeated concussions can cause lasting cumulative damage, and some individuals experience prolonged concussion symptoms. Traumatic brain injuries encompass a broader spectrum from mild concussions to severe injuries causing permanent disability. Severe TBIs can cause consciousness loss, lasting cognitive impairment, physical disability, and personality changes. Legal recovery differs significantly based on injury severity and long-term impact. Even mild concussions warrant medical evaluation and legal consultation because complications can develop later.
Invisible brain injuries are proven through medical testing including MRI, CT scans, neuropsychological evaluations, and cognitive assessments. Medical records documenting treatment, therapy, and symptom progression establish the injury’s reality over time. Testimony from medical professionals about how specific injury mechanisms cause brain damage provides scientific credibility. Personal testimony about how your symptoms affect daily activities, employment, and relationships adds important context. Keeping detailed journals documenting difficulties with memory, concentration, emotional regulation, and physical function creates a record. Financial records showing medical expenses, therapy costs, and lost wages support the injury’s magnitude. Our attorneys present this evidence persuasively to insurance companies and, if necessary, to juries.
Washington law recognizes comparative negligence, meaning you can potentially recover compensation even if you were partially at fault for the accident. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but comparative negligence laws prevent complete loss of compensation simply because you contributed partially to the injury. For example, if you were jaywalking when a negligent driver hit you, you might be 10% at fault while the driver is 90% at fault. You could potentially recover 90% of your damages despite contributing to the accident. Insurance companies will attempt to maximize your assigned fault percentage to minimize their compensation. An attorney protects your interests by limiting your assigned fault and emphasizing the defendant’s negligence.
Seek immediate medical attention even if you feel fine, as brain injuries sometimes develop delayed symptoms. Tell medical professionals about any head impact or loss of consciousness. Document the accident scene through photos and video before it changes. Get contact information from witnesses who saw the accident. Obtain the responsible party’s insurance information and report the incident to their insurance company. Preserve all evidence including clothing, equipment, or objects involved in the accident. Write detailed accounts of what happened while memory is fresh. Keep all medical records, receipts, and documentation of treatment and expenses. Avoid posting about the incident on social media, as insurance companies monitor online statements. Call an attorney immediately to understand your rights and next steps.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd represents brain injury victims on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing upfront and owe no attorney fees unless we secure compensation for you. Our fee typically consists of a percentage of the settlement or judgment amount, with costs discussed clearly before representation begins. This arrangement aligns our interests with yours—we succeed only when you receive fair compensation. Contingency representation removes financial barriers to legal assistance. You don’t need to worry about accumulating attorney bills during recovery. We advance costs for medical records, expert reports, and investigation expenses, recovering these costs from your settlement. There’s no obligation to pay anything if we don’t recover compensation. Contact us at 253-544-5434 to discuss your case with no charge or obligation.
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