Articles in Accident Recovery cover the legal steps after an injury-causing incident, including medical documentation, dealing with insurance adjusters, liability and negligence issues, and pursuing compensation through settlements or lawsuits. This category also addresses deadlines, evidence preservation, and how damages like lost wages, pain and suffering, and future care are calculated.
Georgia gives most injury victims 2 years to file a rear-end collision lawsuit (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33). On I-285 around Atlanta, high speeds, stop-and-go traffic, and chain-reaction crashes often create significant medical and wage-loss claims. This article explains how to maximize your settlement—evidence, insurance strategy, medical documentation, and Georgia-specific rules that can increase or reduce recovery. […]
A reliable personal injury settlement calculator can often estimate your case’s value within about 10% when it accounts for medical bills, lost wages, and documented pain-and-suffering factors. Accuracy depends on jurisdiction, liability, insurance limits, and the quality of your evidence. This article explains how the calculator works, what inputs matter most, and how to use […]