Severe crash where the early insurance position missed the real injury
This claim shows how quickly insurers can undervalue a major injury before the medical picture is clear — a common problem in rideshare and app-based crash claims.


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1) Quick case snapshot (2–3 minutes)
We listen, ask a few key questions, and identify urgent priorities.
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No upfront fee. There is no attorney fee unless we win, and fees are charged only after outstanding medical bills are paid.
That is common in Uber and Lyft cases. We can help sort out which coverage may apply.
Passengers often still have a valid claim. Call for a quick review of the coverage picture.
Fast. Rideshare claims can involve statements, app-status issues, and multiple insurers early on.
Case Stories
Rideshare cases often turn on layered insurance and driver-status issues, so these serious vehicle injury stories help show the level of claim work Johnson Law handles.
This claim shows how quickly insurers can undervalue a major injury before the medical picture is clear — a common problem in rideshare and app-based crash claims.
When the responsible driver is gone or coverage questions get messy, the case often turns on knowing where recovery can still come from and how to document it fast.
Coverage fights do not stop after fault is established. This result underscores how much post-crash insurance resistance can affect the value and timing of recovery.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Rideshare claims are especially fact-specific because liability and coverage can change by app status and driver role.
Cases We Handle
Rideshare crashes are often really multi-policy claims hiding inside a single collision.
You were inside the Uber or Lyft when the crash happened and need clarity on which policy applies.
Claims involving the app driver, the third-party driver, and competing insurers.
Cases where pickup, drop-off, curb activity, or distracted turning created the impact.
Claims where the driver was logged in but had not yet accepted or started a trip.
Cases involving the higher rideshare policy tiers available during active rides.
Claims where the at-fault coverage is missing, disputed, or not enough for the injury.
Cases where the platform relationship becomes part of the insurance and liability fight.
Claims that require sorting through personal auto, rideshare, and third-party coverage at once.
Early action helps protect the coverage story and the value of the claim.
App status, driver role, and insurer overlap can shape the value of the claim from day one.
Early statements and finger-pointing between carriers can shrink the claim if no one pushes back.
Even when the insurance picture is messy, Oregon filing deadlines and notice rules still apply.
Client Reviews
That matters in Uber and Lyft claims, where speed and clarity can keep a confusing claim from getting smaller.
Rideshare cases can involve multiple insurers, different coverage tiers, and fast-moving statements that shape the claim before you know what happened.