Personal injury cases are decided by people who were not there. They did not see the intersection, feel the impact, or live through the recovery. Everything they know, they learn in the courtroom — and what they learn depends on how it is presented.
The challenge in most personal injury cases is not that the facts are weak. It is that the facts are invisible. A police report says “vehicle 1 struck vehicle 2 in the intersection.” That sentence contains no speed, no sight line, no reaction time, no force, no mechanism. The jury fills in what they cannot see, and what they fill in is often wrong — smaller speeds, shorter distances, less force than what actually occurred.
Accident reconstruction is the foundation. Whether the case involves a vehicle collision, a pedestrian impact, a fall on premises, or a workplace incident, the jury needs to see the event unfold in time and space. An animated reconstruction built from physical evidence — scene measurements, LiDAR data, EDR downloads, expert analysis — gives the jury a controlled, accurate experience of what happened. They see the approach, the hazard, the available reaction window, and the point of no return. They understand cause and effect because they watched it happen.
Mechanism of injury connects the event to the body. The jury saw the collision — now they need to see what happened inside the vehicle. How the occupant’s body moved, what forces acted on the spine, the shoulder, the brain. How a disc herniated under compressive load. Why a seemingly moderate impact caused a serious injury. Without this link, defense counsel argues that the injury is exaggerated or unrelated. With it, the causal chain is visible and intuitive.
Medical treatment visualization shows what was done to repair the damage. Surgical procedures that are routine to an orthopedic surgeon are incomprehensible to most jurors. An animation of a multi-level fusion, a rotator cuff repair, or a craniotomy makes the severity of the injury concrete. Jurors who understand what the surgery involved understand why the recovery was long and why the limitations are permanent.
Damages presentations make future harm tangible. Life care plans, lost earnings projections, and medical cost timelines are numbers on paper until they are visualized. A timeline showing forty years of future medical appointments, a chart comparing pre-injury and post-injury earning capacity, or a day-in-the-life video showing the plaintiff’s daily reality — these transform abstract damages into something the jury can evaluate with confidence.
3D accident reconstruction animations, driver’s-point-of-view sequences, scene visualizations from multiple angles, mechanism-of-injury animations, surgical procedure animations, medical illustration boards, treatment timelines, damages charts, life care plan visualizations, day-in-the-life video coordination, and complete trial presentation packages for opening, witness examination, and closing.
Strategy-driven exhibit and presentation packages built around your verdict architecture.
Surgical procedures, injury mechanisms, and anatomical progressions made visible.
Accident reconstruction, engineering failures, and mechanical analysis from evidence.
Evidence-based three-dimensional models of scenes, objects, and structures.
Numerical evidence transformed into clear, persuasive trial graphics.
Documentary video that shows what catastrophic injury looks like day to day.