5 Mistakes to Avoid with Your Personal Injury Case

personal injury case

When putting together a case with your personal injury lawyer in Albuquerque, you should take every possible precaution to avoid undermining your chances of a satisfactory outcome.

To achieve that act decisively, avoid these five common mistakes:

  • Talking about your case
    Talking to anyone about your case is an absolute no-no. Only close family and your attorney need to know the specifics of your case; talking to anyone else can come back to bite you down the line. If you need or want to tell anyone else anything, check with your lawyer first.
  • Acting without your attorney
    Your attorney is your guide to the legal process, and every step you take without that guide puts you at serious risk of a mistake. Don’t sign anything, agree to anything, tell anyone anything, or act in any other way pertaining to your case without the go-ahead from your lawyer. If you aren’t sure whether or not you need your attorney, you need your attorney.
  • Failing to gather and secure evidence
    When building your case the more documentation you have the better. Documenting your expenses, hardships, pain, suffering. Go to every doctor’s visit and checkup, and making sure that the doctor is making thorough notes on your condition. Without evidence, you have no case—your word alone doesn’t carry anything like the weight of thorough documentation and regular medical examinations.
  • Lying
    It’s better to say something that hurts your case than to say something that helps your case, but might be proven untrue down the line. Lies kill personal injury cases faster than anything else; stay honest, trust your lawyer and the system, and you’ll be fine.
  • Social media slips
    Social media lets us make all the mistakes of casual conversation much more efficiently and effectively—so keep quiet about your case and anything even somewhat maybe tangentially related on Twitter, Facebook, and any other sites you visit. You may also want to purge your accounts of anything opposition might point to as indicative of negligent or reckless behavior. You don’t want your own words used to perform a character assassination!