Catastrophic Injuries from High-Speed Crashes
Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI): The brain can be damaged by direct impact or by violent acceleration/deceleration forces. TBIs range from concussions to severe damage causing permanent cognitive impairment, personality changes, and physical disabilities. High-speed crashes frequently cause moderate to severe TBI.
Spinal Cord Injuries: The forces of high-speed impacts can fracture vertebrae and damage the spinal cord, causing paralysis. Cervical (neck) injuries may cause quadriplegia; thoracic and lumbar injuries may cause paraplegia. These injuries typically require lifelong care.
Multiple Fractures: High-speed crashes often break multiple bones simultaneously. Complex fractures may require multiple surgeries, hardware installation, and months of rehabilitation. Some victims never regain full function.
Internal Organ Damage: The sudden deceleration forces of high-speed crashes can rupture organs, cause internal bleeding, and damage vital systems. These injuries may not be immediately apparent but can be life-threatening.
Severe Burns: High-speed crashes are more likely to cause fires and explosions. Burn injuries require extensive treatment including skin grafts, and often result in permanent scarring and disfigurement.
Amputation: Crush injuries from high-speed impacts sometimes require surgical amputation. Limb loss affects every aspect of life and requires prosthetics, adaptation, and ongoing care.
Calculating Full Compensation
Medical Expenses: Emergency care, hospitalization, surgeries, physician visits, prescription medications, physical therapy, rehabilitation, medical equipment, home modifications, and future medical needs. We work with life care planners to project lifetime care costs for catastrophic injuries.
Lost Income: Wages lost during recovery, bonuses and benefits forfeited, and reduced earning capacity if you cannot return to your previous occupation. Economists help calculate the present value of lifetime earning losses.
Pain and Suffering: Physical pain, emotional distress, mental anguish, and reduced quality of life. High-speed crashes cause severe pain during recovery and often result in chronic conditions. These damages can exceed economic losses in serious cases.
Loss of Consortium: Spouses can claim damages for loss of companionship, affection, and intimate relations. Parents and children may have separate claims in some states.
Punitive Damages: When conduct is egregious enough, courts add punitive damages to punish the defendant. These can significantly increase total recovery.
Property Damage: Vehicle replacement or repair, damage to personal belongings, and temporary transportation costs.
Settlement Ranges by Injury Type
Minor Injuries (Soft Tissue): $25,000 - $100,000
Even "minor" injuries from high-speed crashes can be significant due to the forces involved. Value depends on treatment duration and any lasting effects.
Moderate Injuries (Fractures, Disc Injuries): $100,000 - $500,000
These injuries typically require surgery or extensive physical therapy. Lost wages and permanent limitations significantly increase value.
Severe Injuries (TBI, Spinal Cord): $500,000 - $10,000,000+
Catastrophic injuries requiring lifelong care command substantial settlements. Future medical costs and lost earnings drive high values.
Wrongful Death: $1,000,000 - $20,000,000+
Speeding deaths are particularly devastating because they're so preventable. Punitive damages are frequently awarded in fatal speeding cases.
Factors Increasing Value: Clear evidence of excessive speed, reckless conduct supporting punitive damages, commercial vehicle involvement with higher insurance limits, multiple defendants, and severe or permanent injuries all increase case value.
Factors Affecting Value: Available insurance limits often cap practical recovery. Our attorneys identify all potential defendants and coverage sources to maximize recovery.