(303) 757 3300 | (303) 757 3206  

Blog Home


Franklin D. Azar & Associates Blog

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Preserving Evidence of Your Personal Injury

If you are involved in an accident or injury in Colorado, preserving any physical evidence of the incident and your injuries can support your position in any legal claim you may decide to pursue. It is important to do this as soon as possible after the incident, because circumstances can change quickly: accident scenes can be altered, memory can become unreliable, and evidence can be overlooked or misplaced over time.

Though it may be the last thing on your mind right after a traumatic experience, collecting and preserving evidence of your personal injury could be very beneficial should you decide to pursue legal action. Your attorney will be able to use the evidence you collect to help. If you are unable to collect evidence yourself, ask a friend or a loved one to do so for you! Preserving evidence of your accident or injury is one of the most important things you can do to protect your rights.

The first step to take in protecting evidence of your injury is to make sure that physical items are preserved, including torn clothing, broken equipment, and any documents. Here are some steps to take after some common injuries:

Auto Accidents: After a car accident, take photos of the scene, your injuries, and any property damage. In addition, get copies of all medical records pertaining to your treatment after the accident, keep copies of property damage estimates and repairs records, and obtain a copy of any police report that is made.

Defective Consumer Products: If you are injured by a faulty product, be sure to preserve the product in the same condition that it was in when the incident occurred. Keep all written instructions, warnings, labels, and packaging that accompanied the item. If you can, try to locate the original sales receipt for the item. If you cannot find the receipt in your own personal records, ask the seller if they have a copy.

Medical Malpractice: In a medical malpractice or birth injury case, keep or obtain copies of all medical records that pertain to the medical treatment at issue, as well as those related to any second or third opinions obtained from other health care providers. Also, in cases where a physical injury is visible, be sure to take photos that depict any evidence of potentially improper medical treatment.

Take Pictures! Remember that preserving physical evidence itself may not always be possible in every case involving an accident or injury. In these situations, your best option is to take clear and detailed photographs of the area where the injury occurred, from multiple angles, and ideally under the same conditions.

Should I Contact An Attorney? If you've been injured as the result of someone else's carelessness in Colorado should contact an experienced attorney as soon as possible. An attorney can protect your rights and get you the fair compensation that you deserve. Get treatment for your injuries, collect evidence, take pictures, and contact a Colorado personal injury attorney right away.

Labels: , , , ,

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Am I Entitled to Monetary Compensation for Accidents and Injuries?

If you have been the victim of an accident or injury in Colorado, you may be entitled to receive economic recovery from those who are at fault. What you can recover will depend upon the kind of damages you experienced because of the accident or injury -- both during and after the incident.

Here are some types of accidents and injuries for which you may be able to take legal action to monetary compensation for damages in Colorado. Remember that an experienced attorney will explain your options, and will work to ensure that you receive all compensation to which you are entitled.
    Disfigurement. When an accident or injury has left a person deformed or disfigured by scars or other permanent effects on personal appearance, the injured person may be able to collect damages for any mental suffering that arises due to the disfigurement.
    Future medical expenses. If the plaintiff proves that he or she will need continued medical care as a result of the accident or injury.
    General damages. Compensation for harm that results from wrongful conduct, such as physical and mental pain, and loss of enjoyment of life after an accident or injury.
    Household services. The cost of hiring somebody to do things around the house while a person is recuperating from an accident or injury, provided that the expense would not have been incurred had the plaintiff not been injured.
    Loss of consortium. Deprivation of the benefits of married life after an accident or injury: including affection, solace, comfort, companionship, society, help and assistance, and sexual relations between spouses.
    Loss of consortium of a child. Parents may be able to recover damages when their child is injured, and the injuries are severe enough that they interfere with the normal relationship between parents and their children.
    Loss of enjoyment of life. A diminished ability to enjoy the day-to-day pleasures of life, "loss of enjoyment."
    Loss of society and companionship. In wrongful death cases, loss of society and companionship damages represent the benefits from the love, comfort, companionship, and closeness that a person and his or her family would have enjoyed had the person lived.
    Lost earning capacity. After an accident or injury, these damages may be recovered if a person proves that his or her ability to earn money in the future has been impaired or diminished by the injuries.
    Lost wages. These damages represent the amount of money a person would have earned from the time of the injury to the date of settlement or judgment.
    Medical expenses. Bills and expenses for medical services such as doctors, hospital stays, emergency room treatment, ambulance fees, and nursing services.
    Medical surveillance. The cost of monitoring a person's medical condition after the person was exposed to a hazardous substance, so that any illness or injury might be detected early.
    Mental anguish. Any mental suffering or emotional distress associated with an accident or injury, including fright, terror, apprehension, nervousness, anxiety, worry, humiliation, mortification, feeling of lost dignity, embarrassment, grief, and shock.
    Pain and suffering. An award for past and future physical pain in connection with an accident or injury.
    Permanent disability. These damages are proved by medical testimony, and ordinarily a doctor must examine a plaintiff claiming permanent disability.
    Present cash value. The current value of projected future earnings: the amount that, if invested wisely, will over time produce the amount a person would have earned had he or she not been injured.

Should I Contact an Attorney?

If you've been the victim of an accident or injury, you should contact a Colorado attorney experienced in personal injury right away. An attorney can identify all of the damages to which you are entitled and maximize the compensation that you receive for your injuries. A personal injury can be devastating. Don't go through the process alone. Contact a Colorado attorney today and get the compensation that you deserve!

Labels: , , ,

About Frank D. Azar & Assoc.

From its inception 1987, Franklin D. Azar & Associates, P.C. has concentrated in cases involving personal injuries.

In recent years, we have also begun representing persons in a variety of class action lawsuits, ranging from victims of defective and dangerous products to employees who are not receiving full payment for their work from their employers. We currently maintain offices in Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, and Trinidad, Colorado.


Powered by Blogger

Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]





Please read this disclaimer before using any information on this website.

This website is intended to supply general information to the public. We try to insure the accuracy of all of the content, but cannot and do not guarantee that every item is accurate or up to date. Laws change quickly, so the website user should always do further research to make sure that legal information of any sort is up-to-date and accurate before acting upon it. The information on Franklin D. Azar P.C.'s™ web site is not, and is not intended to be legal advice. The only advice we give you is do not take or omit to take any action based solely on this web site's™ information.

In addition, the legal information provided at this site is general's™ not specific. The website user should never assume that this information applies to his or her specific situation without consulting competent counsel in the state in which he or she is doing business. We will not represent anyone who learns about us through this website in a state where the website fails to comply with all laws and ethical rules. We provide you this information to inform you about legal issues of current interest and about services we offer our clients. We assume no obligation to update the information.

This website is intended to provide useful information. Your visiting our web site does not create an attorney-client relationship. The website user should not consider this information alone to be an invitation for an attorney-client relationship. E-mail communication with an attorney via this website connection does not, in and of itself, establish an attorney-client relationship where none has previously existed. We do not intend any links on our website to be referrals to or endorsements of the linked entities and Franklin D. Azar, P.C. makes no representations of any kind with respect to those other web sites. The use of Internet e-mail to convey confidential or sensitive information is discouraged.