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Car Accident Lawyer in Texas & New Mexico – The Longhorn Law Firm
Car Accident Attorneys — TX & NM

Hurt in a car crash? We fight for what you're owed.

If another driver's negligence put you in the hospital, out of work, or in chronic pain, you have rights — and you have options. The Longhorn Law Firm represents car accident victims across Texas and New Mexico, on contingency. You pay nothing unless we win.

Every year, hundreds of thousands of Texans and New Mexicans are injured in car accidents. Most don't realize how much they're entitled to recover. Insurance companies count on that. They make low-ball offers in the first weeks, push you toward quick settlements, and quietly hope you sign before you understand what your case is really worth. We don't let that happen.

What to do right after a car accident

The hours and days after a crash matter more than most people realize. The actions you take — and the things you say (or don't say) to the other driver, the police, and especially the insurance companies — can dramatically affect what your case is worth months later.

Here's the short version of what to do:

  1. Call 911 and get a police report. Even for minor crashes. An official accident report is one of the most important pieces of evidence in your case.
  2. Get medical attention immediately. Don't tough it out. Adrenaline masks injuries. The longer you wait to see a doctor, the easier it is for insurance to argue your injuries weren't from the crash.
  3. Photograph everything. The vehicles, the scene, the intersection, any visible injuries, road conditions, traffic signals. Take more photos than you think you need.
  4. Get witness contact information. Anyone who saw what happened — get their name and phone number before they leave.
  5. Don't admit fault. Not at the scene. Not to the other driver. Not to the police. Not on social media. Not to the insurance adjuster who calls the next day.
  6. Don't give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. Their adjuster is not your friend — their entire job is to find ways to reduce or deny your claim.
  7. Call an attorney before you accept any settlement offer. First offers are almost always far below what your case is worth.
★ Important
Do not sign anything from the insurance company until you talk to a lawyer.

Insurance adjusters will sometimes show up fast with a check and a release form. Once you sign that release, your case is over — even if you later discover injuries that need surgery, ongoing treatment, or permanent care. Always talk to an attorney first. Our consultations are free.

Who is liable for your accident

Liability in a car accident isn't always obvious, and it isn't always limited to the other driver. Depending on the facts, multiple parties may share responsibility — which often means more sources of compensation for you.

Parties who may be liable in a car accident case include:

  • The at-fault driver — their personal auto insurance is usually the primary source of recovery
  • The driver's employer — if the driver was working at the time of the crash (delivery driver, sales rep, company vehicle)
  • The vehicle owner — if a different person owned the car and negligently entrusted it to the driver
  • A bar or restaurant — under dram shop laws if the driver was over-served before driving drunk
  • The vehicle manufacturer — for defective brakes, tires, airbags, or other safety equipment
  • A government entity — for dangerous road conditions, missing signage, or negligent maintenance
  • A third-party driver — even if not the one who hit you, if their actions caused the chain of events

This is why working with an experienced injury attorney matters. We investigate every angle of liability so no available source of compensation gets missed.

Texas vs. New Mexico — what's different

The two states have meaningfully different laws when it comes to car accident claims. We're licensed in both, and the difference matters more than people realize.

Statute of Limitations

In Texas, you generally have 2 years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit. Miss that deadline, and you lose the right to recover anything — no exceptions in most cases.

In New Mexico, you generally have 3 years from the date of the accident to file. Slightly more breathing room, but the same rule applies: miss the deadline, lose the right.

Don't wait. Evidence disappears, witnesses become harder to find, and your medical records start to look less connected to the crash the longer you delay.

Comparative Fault

Both states use modified comparative fault rules, but they're structured differently. In Texas, if you're 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. In New Mexico, you can recover even if you're significantly at fault — your award is just reduced by your percentage of fault. This means a case that might be a loss in Texas could still be worth pursuing in New Mexico.

Insurance Minimums

Texas requires drivers to carry at least $30,000 per person / $60,000 per accident in bodily injury liability coverage. New Mexico requires $25,000 / $50,000. Both are far below what serious injury cases are actually worth — which is why uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage is so important.

What you can recover

The phrase "what's my case worth" doesn't have a one-size-fits-all answer. Your settlement or verdict depends on the severity of your injuries, the strength of liability evidence, the available insurance coverage, and the long-term impact on your life. But broadly, car accident victims can recover:

  • Medical expenses — past, present, and future (including surgeries, therapy, prescriptions, in-home care)
  • Lost wages — every dollar you couldn't earn because of your injuries
  • Loss of earning capacity — if your injuries reduce what you can earn going forward
  • Property damage — repair or replacement of your vehicle and other damaged belongings
  • Pain and suffering — the physical pain and emotional toll the crash caused
  • Mental anguish — anxiety, depression, PTSD, fear of driving
  • Loss of consortium — the impact on your relationships and home life
  • Punitive damages — when the at-fault driver's conduct was especially reckless (drunk driving, road rage, intentional acts)
"Insurance companies want you to think your case is about the dent in your car. We make sure they understand it's about your life."

Why hire The Longhorn Law Firm

You have plenty of choices for a personal injury attorney in Texas and New Mexico. Here's what sets us apart:

  • You talk to your attorney. Not a paralegal. Not an intake coordinator. The lawyer handling your case picks up the phone.
  • We're trial-ready. Insurance companies know which firms will actually try cases and which ones won't. We will. Their offers reflect that.
  • Two-state coverage. Shawn Barnett is licensed in New Mexico and admitted to federal court in Texas. With Texas co-counsel Jonathan Perez, we have full representation across both states.
  • No fee unless we win. No upfront costs. No hidden bills. We don't get paid unless you do.
  • Available 24/7. Accidents don't happen on business hours.

If you or someone you love has been hurt in a car accident, don't wait to get answers. Call us now or fill out our free case review form. We'll listen, evaluate honestly, and tell you what we think — no obligation, no pressure.

Common Car Accident Injuries

What we see most often.

Whiplash & Neck Injuries
Soft tissue damage that can cause chronic pain, headaches, and reduced range of motion for years.
Traumatic Brain Injury
Concussions and TBI from sudden impact — often undiagnosed for weeks but life-altering.
Spinal & Back Injuries
Herniated discs, vertebral fractures, and spinal cord damage requiring surgery and long-term care.
Broken Bones & Fractures
From simple breaks to complex fractures requiring surgery, plates, screws, and months of rehab.
Internal Injuries
Organ damage and internal bleeding — often the most dangerous because symptoms are delayed.
PTSD & Emotional Trauma
Anxiety, depression, and fear of driving — real injuries that deserve real compensation.
How They Try to Beat You

Comparative fault — the 51% rule that ends cases.

The single legal rule that most often determines whether a Texas car accident case is worth pursuing — or whether it dies before it begins — is Tex. CPRC § 33.001, the modified comparative fault statute. Understanding it is the difference between a full recovery and zero.

Texas — modified comparative fault with a 51% bar

Under § 33.001, the jury allocates percentages of responsibility among all parties. If the plaintiff's percentage is 50% or less, recovery is reduced by that percentage but otherwise available. If the plaintiff's percentage is 51% or more, recovery is barred entirely — the plaintiff gets nothing, regardless of how serious the injuries are.

The practical effect: a one-percentage-point swing at the 50/51 line is the difference between a full case and no case at all. Defense lawyers know this and structure their entire approach around pushing the plaintiff over 50%. Every alleged failure of the plaintiff — not braking soon enough, not using a turn signal, glancing at a radio — gets counted toward a percentage. Three small failures stacked together can reach the bar.

New Mexico — pure comparative fault

New Mexico adopted pure comparative fault in Scott v. Rizzo, 96 N.M. 682 (1981). Under this regime, the plaintiff can be 99% at fault and still recover 1% of their damages. There is no bar at any percentage. This is a dramatically more plaintiff-friendly framework than Texas, and it changes case selection at the margins — cases that are not viable across the state line in Texas are sometimes viable in NM.

How fault gets allocated to non-parties

Texas allows juries to allocate fault not only to the parties at trial but also to "responsible third parties" (RTPs) — non-parties whose conduct is alleged to have contributed. Under Tex. CPRC § 33.004, defendants must designate RTPs in advance, and the plaintiff has a chance to bring them in as actual defendants. The RTP framework is one of the most heavily-litigated areas in Texas civil practice because it directly affects how the percentage pie gets cut.

Why the percentage is everything

Two cases with identical facts and identical injuries can have wildly different outcomes based solely on percentage allocation. A $1 million case with the plaintiff at 0% is a $1 million recovery. The same case with the plaintiff at 50% is a $500,000 recovery. The same case at 51% is zero. Defense lawyers spend most of their effort here.

Comparative Fault Strategy
Why early evidence preservation matters most

The way to keep the plaintiff's percentage low — or at zero — is to build a clean evidentiary record from the start. Police accident reports, witness statements before memories fade, traffic camera footage before it's overwritten, vehicle data, photographs of the scene before it's altered. We start this work the day we're retained, not weeks later.

UM/UIM coverage — when stacking matters.

The most common scenario in serious Texas and New Mexico car accident cases is this: the at-fault driver carries minimum liability coverage ($30,000 in Texas, $25,000 in NM), the injuries are far more serious than that, and the question becomes — what other sources of insurance can cover the gap?

The answer, for many clients, is their own Uninsured Motorist (UM) and Underinsured Motorist (UIM) coverage. Most auto policies in both states include UM/UIM by default — though many drivers don't realize they have it. UM applies when the at-fault driver has no insurance. UIM applies when the at-fault driver has insurance, but not enough to cover the injuries.

Stacking — Texas vs. New Mexico

"Stacking" means combining UM/UIM coverage from multiple policies, multiple vehicles, or multiple insureds to create a larger pool of coverage. The treatment varies sharply between states:

  • Texas — generally restrictive. Texas courts and statutes have limited stacking in many circumstances, particularly between household policies. Anti-stacking clauses in policies are typically enforced.
  • New Mexico — generally permissive. Under Schmick v. State Farm, 103 N.M. 216 (1985), New Mexico allows stacking of UM/UIM coverage across multiple vehicles on the same policy. NM also allows inter-policy stacking in many circumstances.

For a New Mexico resident with three vehicles each carrying $100,000 in UIM coverage, this can be the difference between $100,000 in available coverage and $300,000.

The UM/UIM claim is a contract claim, not a tort claim

A UM/UIM claim is brought against the plaintiff's own insurance company, under the contract of insurance — not against the at-fault driver. This changes the legal landscape:

  • The case proceeds as a breach of contract action
  • The plaintiff must still prove the at-fault driver's negligence and the resulting damages
  • Bad faith claims may be available if the insurer wrongly denies or underpays
  • In Texas, Tex. Ins. Code §§ 541, 542 govern unfair claim settlement practices; in NM, similar statutes apply

Crash reconstruction — when expert evidence wins.

In any disputed-liability car accident case, the question of "what actually happened" is reconstructed after the fact. Done well, reconstruction wins cases. Done poorly, it loses them.

What reconstruction experts use

Modern accident reconstruction draws on:

  • EDR (Event Data Recorder) data — most cars manufactured after 2014 have a federally-mandated EDR. The EDR records 5 seconds of pre-crash data including speed, throttle, brake application, steering input, and seatbelt status.
  • Vehicle damage analysis — the pattern and depth of crush damage to each vehicle reveals impact angle, closing speed, and direction of force.
  • Roadway evidence — skid marks, tire impressions, debris field patterns, fluid spills, and gouge marks in the pavement.
  • Surveillance video — many intersections, businesses, and government buildings have continuous video that may capture the crash itself.
  • Cellular and telematics data — both drivers' phone records, and increasingly, OEM telematics systems (OnStar, FordPass, Toyota Connected Services) can reveal location, speed, and even crash event flags.

When to retain a reconstructionist

For minor fender-benders with clear fault, reconstruction is overkill. For serious-injury cases with disputed liability, or any case where the police report is ambiguous, reconstruction is essential. The expert needs access to the vehicles, the scene, and the data — all of which start degrading the moment the crash happens. The vehicles get repaired, the scene gets repaved, the data gets overwritten. Early retention is critical.

The cost-benefit calculation

Reconstruction experts typically charge $400-700 per hour. A complete reconstruction (scene visit, vehicle inspection, EDR download, written report, deposition, trial testimony) can run $15,000-50,000. For cases with damages in the hundreds of thousands or millions, this is straightforward case investment. For smaller cases, alternative approaches may be appropriate. We make this call case by case.

Car accident FAQ.

What's the deadline to file a car accident case?

In Texas, generally 2 years from the date of the crash under Tex. CPRC § 16.003. In New Mexico, generally 3 years under NMSA § 37-1-8. For wrongful death cases, the clock runs from the date of death rather than the date of the crash. For cases involving government vehicles or government drivers, much shorter notice requirements apply — 6 months in Texas, 90 days in New Mexico.

Can I still recover if I was partially at fault?

In Texas, yes — but only if you are 50% or less at fault. If you are 51% or more, you recover nothing under Tex. CPRC § 33.001. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. In New Mexico, yes regardless of percentage under Scott v. Rizzo's pure comparative fault rule. Even a 99%-at-fault plaintiff can recover 1% of damages in NM.

What if the at-fault driver doesn't have enough insurance?

Most policies in Texas and NM include Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) coverage. If the at-fault driver has no insurance, UM applies. If they have insurance but not enough, UIM applies. Many clients are not aware they have this coverage on their own policies — it should be checked early. Stacking across multiple policies/vehicles is more available in NM than in TX.

Should I give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance company?

No. The adjuster will call within 24-48 hours and try to get a recorded statement framed as routine. Anything you say can be used to argue against your case later — even innocent statements like "I'm doing okay" or "I'm not sure what happened" can be twisted into evidence that you weren't injured or weren't paying attention. Politely decline and refer the adjuster to your lawyer.

How much is my car accident case worth?

It depends on the severity of injuries, medical treatment received and projected, lost wages and lost earning capacity, available insurance coverage, and the strength of liability evidence. Soft-tissue injuries with full recovery typically settle in the low five figures. Cases involving surgery, permanent injury, or significant lost income frequently settle in the mid-five figures to mid-six figures. Catastrophic injuries and wrongful death cases settle in the high six figures or seven figures. No honest lawyer can value a case without seeing the records.

What if my own insurance company is treating me unfairly?

You have potential claims for breach of contract and statutory bad faith. In Texas, Tex. Ins. Code § 541 and § 542 prohibit unfair claim settlement practices and provide remedies including treble damages and attorney's fees. In NM, similar protections apply. Bad faith claims against your own carrier add significant leverage and can convert a marginal case into a strong one.

Do I need to go to the doctor right away?

Yes. Many injuries — concussions, soft-tissue injuries, internal injuries — don't show full symptoms immediately. Delayed treatment also gives the defense an argument that the injuries weren't related to the crash. Same-day or next-day medical attention is the standard recommendation. Document everything.

What if I'm getting calls from the other driver's lawyer?

Don't talk to them. Tell them you have a lawyer (even if you're still selecting one) and that all communication should go through that lawyer. Defense counsel will use any direct conversation to extract admissions. There is no benefit to you in speaking with them directly.

How long will my case take?

Soft-tissue cases with clear liability typically resolve in 6-12 months. Cases with surgery or significant disputed liability typically take 12-24 months. Cases that go to trial commonly take 2-3 years from filing to verdict. The longer cases are usually the higher-value cases — premature settlement is one of the most common ways clients leave money on the table.

What does "no fee unless we win" actually mean?

It means you pay nothing out of pocket. Our fees are a percentage of the recovery — typically 33-40% depending on the stage of the case at resolution — and we advance all case expenses (filing fees, expert witnesses, depositions, court costs). If we don't recover anything, we don't get paid and you don't owe us anything. This is the standard contingency fee arrangement in personal injury practice.

Insurance company tactics we see every day.

Insurance companies aren't on your side. They're businesses with adjusters trained to pay you as little as possible. Here are the tactics they use — and why having an experienced attorney changes the math.

01
The Quick Lowball Offer
A fast, friendly offer within days of the crash — before you know the extent of your injuries. They're betting you'll take it because you're scared and need money. Once you accept, you can't go back for more.
02
The Recorded Statement Trap
An adjuster calls asking for a "quick statement" while you're still in pain and medicated. They'll use anything you say — even casual phrases like "I'm fine" — to undercut your case. Never give one without an attorney present.
03
Blaming You for the Crash
They'll argue you were partially at fault — speeding, distracted, not wearing a seatbelt — to reduce or eliminate your recovery. In Texas, if they get you to 51% fault, you get nothing.
04
Delay, Deny, Defend
The standard insurance playbook. They'll delay your claim hoping you give up, deny coverage for treatments they should pay, and defend in court if you push back — counting on most people not having the resources to fight.
05
Minimizing Your Injuries
They'll claim your pain is "pre-existing," your treatment was "unnecessary," or your injuries are "minor." They hire their own doctors to dispute your diagnoses. We bring in independent medical experts to fight back.
06
Social Media Surveillance
Insurance investigators monitor your social media looking for any photo or post they can twist to suggest you're not really injured. One smiling vacation photo can be used against you. We tell clients exactly what to avoid.

Already getting calls from the insurance company? Don't say a word.

What You Can Recover

The full scope of your damages.

01
Medical Expenses
Past, current, and future — including hospital bills, surgeries, prescriptions, therapy, and long-term care.
02
Lost Wages
Every paycheck missed because of your injuries — including PTO used, sick leave, and missed shifts.
03
Loss of Earning Capacity
Future income you'll never earn because your injuries permanently limit your ability to work.
04
Property Damage
Repair or replacement of your vehicle, plus personal property destroyed in the crash.
05
Pain & Suffering
The physical pain you've endured and will continue to endure as a result of someone else's negligence.
06
Mental Anguish
PTSD, anxiety, depression, fear of driving, sleep disorders — the emotional toll the crash took.
07
Loss of Consortium
The impact your injuries had on your marriage, your relationships, and your role in your family.
08
Punitive Damages
When the at-fault driver was especially reckless — drunk driving, hit-and-run, intentional acts.
How Your Case Moves Forward

The settlement process, step by step.

Most clients have never been through a personal injury case before. Here's exactly what to expect — from the day we take your case to the day you collect your check.

01
Free Consultation & Case Acceptance
You call us, tell us what happened, and we'll evaluate honestly whether you have a case worth pursuing. If we take it, you sign a contingency agreement — meaning we only get paid if we win. No upfront costs, ever.
Typical Timeline: 24–48 Hours
02
Investigation & Evidence Gathering
We send notice letters to insurance companies (which stops them from contacting you directly), order police reports, pull surveillance footage, gather witness statements, and start building your case. We also send a spoliation letter demanding all evidence be preserved.
Timeline: 2–6 Weeks
03
Medical Treatment & Documentation
You focus on getting better — we handle the legal side. We coordinate with your doctors to make sure your injuries are properly documented, all treatment is captured in the record, and any long-term implications are evaluated by specialists.
Timeline: Until You Reach Maximum Medical Improvement
04
Demand Package & Negotiation
Once your treatment plateaus, we send the at-fault insurer a comprehensive demand package — medical bills, lost wages, expert reports, pain and suffering documentation, and a settlement demand. Then we negotiate hard. Most cases settle here.
Timeline: 60–120 Days
05
Lawsuit Filing (If Needed)
If the insurance company won't pay fair value, we file suit. This dramatically changes the negotiation dynamic — insurance companies often increase their offers substantially once they realize you're serious. We prepare every case as if it's going to trial.
Timeline: 6–18 Months from Filing
06
Trial or Final Settlement
Most cases settle before trial — but we're always ready to go to court. When your case resolves (settlement or verdict), we pay off your medical liens, deduct case costs and our fee, and you receive your net recovery. Direct deposit available.
Result: Maximum Recovery
Medical Bills & Treatment

What happens to your medical bills.

The number one worry we hear from clients isn't legal — it's "How am I going to pay these medical bills?" The answer depends on your specific situation, but here's how it usually works.

In most cases, you don't have to pay your medical bills out of pocket while your case is pending. Treatment can be billed to your health insurance, MedPay coverage on your auto policy, or treated on a medical lien — meaning the provider waits to be paid from your settlement.

When your case settles, your medical bills come out of the gross settlement before you receive your portion. We negotiate aggressively with hospitals, providers, and lien holders to reduce what you owe — often saving clients tens of thousands of dollars in medical liens.

We never want a client to skip treatment they need. The full extent of your injuries must be documented to maximize the value of your case. If money is an obstacle to treatment, talk to us — we have a network of providers who treat injury victims on liens.

★ Critical
Don't Skip Treatment
Gaps in treatment are the #1 way insurance companies devalue your case. They'll argue your injuries can't be that bad if you stopped going to the doctor. Keep going until your doctor releases you.
★ Health Insurance
Use Your Coverage
If you have health insurance, use it. The insurer may have a right of subrogation (repayment from your settlement), but we negotiate those down aggressively — and using insurance preserves cash.
★ MedPay / PIP
Check Your Auto Policy
Texas drivers often have $2,500–$10,000 of MedPay coverage that pays medical bills regardless of fault. Many drivers don't realize they have it. We help you tap into every available source of coverage.

Worried about medical bills? Let's get you a plan.

Where We Practice

Courts where we file your case.

TX
Texas Courts
  • Bexar County District Courts (San Antonio)Personal injury cases filed in our home base — including high-value cases moved up from county court.
  • Travis County District Courts (Austin)Active practice in Austin's busy injury docket — known for fair juries and reasonable verdicts.
  • Harris County District Courts (Houston)The largest trial volume in Texas — we file and try cases here regularly.
  • Dallas County District CourtsFull coverage of North Texas injury and wrongful death cases.
  • Tarrant County District Courts (Fort Worth)Active in DFW's injury courts.
  • U.S. District Court — Western District of TexasFederal court matters where diversity jurisdiction or federal questions apply.
NM
New Mexico Courts
  • Second Judicial District (Albuquerque)The state's largest district court — covers Bernalillo County and most of central New Mexico.
  • First Judicial District (Santa Fe)Covers Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, and Los Alamos counties.
  • Third Judicial District (Las Cruces)Southern New Mexico's primary injury venue.
  • Fifth Judicial District (Roswell & Carlsbad)Permian Basin oilfield injury cases and southeastern NM matters.
  • Eleventh Judicial District (Farmington)Northwestern New Mexico — including Navajo Nation adjacent matters.
  • U.S. District Court — District of New MexicoFederal trial work throughout the state.
Frequently Asked

Common questions, straight answers.

Q1
How much does it cost to hire a car accident lawyer?
Nothing upfront. We work on contingency — meaning we only get paid if we win your case. Our fee comes out of your settlement or verdict. If we don't win, you owe us absolutely nothing.
Q2
How long do I have to file a car accident claim?
In Texas, you have 2 years from the date of the accident. In New Mexico, you have 3 years. But evidence disappears fast — call us as soon as you can to protect your rights.
Q3
What if I was partially at fault for the accident?
You may still have a case. Texas uses a 51% rule — if you're less than 51% at fault, you can recover. New Mexico is even more forgiving — you can recover even if you're significantly at fault, with the award reduced by your share.
Q4
Should I accept the insurance company's first offer?
Almost never. First offers are almost always significantly lower than what your case is actually worth. Talk to an attorney before signing or accepting anything.
Q5
How long will my car accident case take to resolve?
Anywhere from a few months to a few years, depending on the severity of your injuries, the strength of liability evidence, and whether the insurance company plays fair. Simple cases sometimes settle in 90–180 days. Complex cases involving long-term care can take 1–3 years.
Q6
What if the other driver doesn't have insurance?
You may still have recovery options through your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage. Most Texas and New Mexico drivers have this coverage and don't realize it. We pull every policy involved — yours, the at-fault driver's, household members' policies — to find every dollar of coverage available.
Q7
Will my case actually go to trial?
Most cases settle before trial — but we prepare every case as if it will go in front of a jury. Insurance companies know which attorneys actually try cases and which ones won't. That reputation directly affects the settlement offers we get. If trial is the only path to fair value, we're ready.
Q8
How do you calculate what my case is worth?
Case value depends on factors including: total medical bills (past and future), lost wages and earning capacity, severity and permanence of injuries, pain and suffering, available insurance coverage, and liability strength. No honest attorney will quote you a specific number without reviewing your full case — but we'll give you a realistic range after our investigation.
Q9
What if I can't afford medical treatment while my case is pending?
We work with a network of doctors and specialists who treat injury victims on a medical lien — meaning they wait to be paid out of your settlement, not from your pocket. We also help you tap into your health insurance, MedPay coverage, and other available benefits to make sure you get the care you need.

Don't face the insurance
companies alone.

Free consultation. No obligation. No fee unless we win.

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