Why Lawyers in Brain Injury Cases Get Fired
How Not to Make the Mistake that Gets you Fired in a Brain Injury Case
By Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.
I have been doing brain injury cases almost exclusively for 20 years. Handling a brain injury case requires expertise beyond what even the best personal injury lawyers are likely to have. The best advice is don’t jump into a brain injury case, because you think it will be easy. It won’t be. But if you do handle a brain injury case, we believe it will help you to hear the things you must be careful not to do, or you may get fired, for cause.
- You are in too big of a rush to get the check to understand the full extent of your client’s brain injury case.
- You have too many cases in your office.
- You don’t understand brain injury and brain injury survivors.
- No one in your office seems to care.
- You don’t accept the fact that a brain injury case will require substantially more time than a typical rear end case.
- You don’t make all efforts to find a deep pocket.
- You aren’t prepared to invest $50,000 to $100,000 to prove the full extent of the disability.
- You believe that a normal report on a CT Scan on date of injury eliminates all question of permanent brain damage.
- You believe the ER report.
- You believe a neuropsychologist when they say that labeling your client with a brain injury will be harmful to them.
- You don’t demand an MRI be done by someone who is doing research in the field of brain injury. Click here for the Need for a Forensic MRI.
- You think because your client has a job after the brain injury, there is no loss of earning capacity. Click here for Loss of Earning Capacity in a Brain Injury Case.
- You value the case based on some ratio to the amount of the medical bills.
- You think neurologists are brain injury experts. Click here for the Problem with Neurologists after Brain Injury.
- You take at face value what the survivor says about his or her problems without talking to family members.
- You think brain injury is strictly a cognitive problem and don’t consider the behavioral, mood and physical deficits that make up the most significant problems in a brain injury case. Click here for the understanding the full spectrum of brain injury deficits.
- You don’t get the 911 tapes as soon as you are retained.
- You have no end game as to how to continue to negotiate after mediation fails.
- You don’t retain the right experts.
- You don’t keep in touch with your client.
- You haven’t been to your client’s home.
- You don’t return your clients’ phone calls or respond to their emails.
- You don’t understand your client’s all consuming passion for his or her case.
- You were hired when the client did not understand the nature of the contract for your services.
- You didn’t get a guardian appointed when your client was in a coma or unable to contract.
- You have given up on the case and not told the client.
- You think defense experts understand brain injury better than your clients.
- You don’t believe your client when they tell you that they are different.