Tell Us What Happened
Call us or submit the form. You can explain the accident, injury, insurance issue, or concern in plain language.
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Share a few details about what happened. Our team can review the information and help you understand your next step.
Your information is kept confidential. Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship. A lawyer-client relationship is only formed after the firm agrees to represent you and both sides complete the required agreement.
For urgent questions, call the office directly.
Accident reports, police reports, insurance letters, claim numbers, or adjuster information.
Images or recordings of the accident scene, your injuries, vehicle damage, or unsafe property condition.
Medical records, discharge papers, treatment notes, prescriptions, or upcoming appointment details.
Names, phone numbers, emails, or any notes from people who saw what happened.
Employer information, missed-work details, pay records, or notes about how the injury has affected your job.
A short timeline of what happened and the questions you want answered before deciding what to do.
If you do not have these items yet, that is okay. We can still start with your story and explain what may be useful later.
Speaking with a lawyer early can help you avoid common mistakes, preserve important information, and understand what steps may protect your claim.
Deadlines may apply to New Jersey injury claims. Some cases may also involve shorter notice requirements. The safest step is to ask for guidance as soon as possible.
Yes. Your case review is free. You pay no attorney fee unless Pinnacle Injury Law recovers compensation for you.
No. You only need to explain what happened. We can help you understand whether your situation may involve a vehicle accident, premises liability claim, dog bite claim, workplace injury, civil rights issue, wrongful death claim, or another type of personal injury case.
Be careful before giving a recorded statement or accepting an offer. Insurance companies may move quickly after an accident, and early statements can affect your claim. Speaking with a lawyer first can help protect your rights.
Yes. Many injuries take time to fully develop. You do not need to wait until treatment is finished before asking questions about your claim.
Helpful items may include accident reports, photos, videos, insurance information, medical paperwork, correspondence, witness details, and a short timeline of what happened. If you do not have everything yet, you can still reach out.
No. Submitting a form or contacting the firm does not create an attorney-client relationship. A lawyer-client relationship is only formed after the firm agrees to represent you and the required agreement is completed.
As soon as possible. Evidence can disappear, witnesses can become harder to reach, and deadlines may apply. Early guidance can help you avoid mistakes and preserve important information.
Depending on the facts, compensation may include medical bills, future medical care, lost income, reduced earning ability, pain and suffering, permanent injury, disability, and other losses related to the injury.