Heads Up For Student-Athlete Brain Injuries

We discussed in this blog previously how the NFL has focused national attention on the danger of both short- and long-term dangers from concussions in all age groups, and that even a “mild” concussion is a form of brain injury. We also noted that “getting your bell rung” in high school athletics may not be as severe as at the collegiate or pro levels, but possibly more damaging due to the stage of development of teenagers. In fact, data from the National Center for Injury Protection and Control indicates that teenagers may be the group at the highest risk for suffering a traumatic brain injury.

That’s perhaps what makes a study to be published in the Journal of Pediatrics so interesting, even if it is “common sense.” In research that focused on youth hockey, it appears  bracing for an impending blow to the head could reduce the harm from the hit In the study, players wore helmets hooked up to high-tech sensors that measured impact and compared that to game videos and with the number of injuries the players suffered during the season. According to the findings, being prepared for an imminent concussion helped offset more serious injuries. As CNN explains:

“If players anticipate collisions they can better absorb the forces related to impact,” said Jason Mihalik, lead study author and assistant professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “[Athletes] who don’t expect to get body checked are not able to tense the neck muscles to absorb force, and that can lead to a more severe impact to the head.”

Coaches need to train players to avoid the “calamitous” effects of being blindsided, according to Professor Mihalik. So if your kids are active on middle school or high school sports teams, remember that any impairment to the circuitry of the brain at minimum diminishes the ability to process information and perform in school. And serious concussions can lead to permanent and severe harm to the injured person.

Indianapolis auto accidents

John P. Young is your Indiana Truck accident lawyer. Mr. Young practices truck accident Injury law out of Indianapolis. Mr. Young’s practice includes all highway accidents including semi tractor-trailer accidents, large truck accidents, bus accidents , motor cycle accidents and car accidents.

On May 23, 2010, an Franklin Township firefighter died in a truck accident. The accident occurred on the near south side of Indianapolis, on Madison Avenue. For reasons not clear, David Joseph Newsome was travelling at a very high rate of speed when he lost control of his truck, hit another car, hit a utility pole and slammed into a building. Although there were folks in the building, no one was seriously injured. The collision cut a natural gas line, but the utility quickly closed off the leak.

In another reported collision, a 15 year old girl was reported to be in critical condition from injuries received in an accident in the 5000 block of 56th Street near Kessler Blvd, East Drive. Unfortunately the girl was standing in the median, working to collect money for the Indiana School for the deaf where the young girl was a student, when a man intentionally swerved into the median to strike the girl and her mother.

If you or a family member are injured in a truck accident, call John P. Young right away. Mr. Young guarantees there will be no fee unless fair compensation is collected for you and your family. You can contact Mr. Young toll free at 1-888-639-5161 or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com. There is no charge for our initial private consultation.

Indiana Senior Citizen Fights Off Pit Bull Attack

An 86-year-old man in Harrison County, Indiana, recently was viciously mauled by his neighbor’s three pit bulls. The dogs apparently crossed an active invisible fence and went into the man’s yard after a female pit bull carried a litter of  puppies into a shed on his property. The man was then attacked by three adult dogs when he walked into his yard. He was bitten several times, but fortunately, the ex-Navy boxer managed to fight off the attack. Police arrived and tasered one of the dogs. The animals will likely be put down or transferred to a pit bull rescue organization. “It was the most horrible nightmare that you can imagine,” the victim’s wife told local media.

Dog owners have a duty to confine their pets to their property to avoid injury and hazards to others. Indiana law specifically requires dog owners to exercise reasonable care in restraining and maintaining their dog on a leash or on their premises. If a dog owner fails to properly restrain or maintain a dog, the owner could be liable in negligence for money damages to the person who gets bitten in an unprovoked attack.

Pit bulls, in particular, have developed a reputation for violent, aggressive behavior. But any dog attack, regardless of breed involved, can obviously inflict serious injuries on the victim, including physical as well as emotional trauma. If you or a loved one have been victimized by a dog attack, contact the experienced personal injury lawyers at Young and Young in Indianapolis for a free consultation about how you can be fairly compensated for your injuries.

Indiana Drunk Driving Attorney

John P. Young, as an Indiana Drunk Driving accident attorney, offers you some of the law regarding providing alcohol to minors. It is illegal to provide alcohol to a minor (Ind. Code 7.1-5-7-8), and to encourage a minor to possess alcohol (Ind. Code 7.1-5-7-15).  Violating these statutes creates resumption that the person who violated the statutes is negligent.  Negligence is what an Injured Hoosier must prove in order to recover from a person who caused their injuries, and the injuries to their families.  It matters not that the person who provides the alcohol is a party host or a bar or a liquor store.  The Courts have determined that public policy strongly favors making people who violate these statutes responsible for the harm they cause.  Serving alcohol to minors is deemed inappropriate by the same public policy.   

Minor drivers have a number of things going against them already, we cannot tolerate minors driving and drinking.  Minors have less experience behind the wheel and less experience means less ability to control a car in an emergency.  A minor may have that bravado than nothing can happen to me, so they drive recklessly to get a rush or to try and impress their friends.  Teenage brains are not fully developed and what might make sense to an adult might not be a danger sign to a teenager.  Teenagers are in that texting mode, and may not give the road the full attention it deserves.  Mix in alcohol, wherein the reaction time is slowed, the bravado might be increased and the lack of concern for danger grows and you have a recipe for disaster.

Years ago people were not as concerned about these issues as they are today.  Drunk driving fatalities among teenagers are still too high, and every wrongful death is painful.  However, awareness and tighter control on alcohol are heading fatality statistics in the downward direction.

If you have been injured by a drunk driver, call John P. Young. The call is toll free 1-888-639-5161 or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com.  We guarantee we will charge no fee unless we collect fair compensation for you and your family. Call today.

Brain-Injured Vets, Home Caregivers, Get Boost In New Law

A serious brain injury can happen in a number of different ways.  The most common cause of brain injury is a trauma from a slip-and-fall accident or an auto crash. Separately, it is widely acknowledged that brain trauma has become the “signature” injury in Iraq and Afghanistan combat. Treatment breakthroughs for our military vets will also help everyone with brain-related conditions. But as we noted below, no matter the rate of recovery, or amount of symptoms, most brain injury causes permanent harm to the injured person. Brain injuries also take a huge  physical, emotional, psychological, and financial toll on the victim’s loved ones.

On May 5, President Obama signed a bi-partisan bill that s expected to improve treatment options for military vets with brain damage. The Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act will give veterans with traumatic brain injuries more access to private care outside the VA hospital system, increase services for female and homeless veterans, and provide more care in rural areas. Perhaps most significantly, the law provides training and stipends to those caring for wounded service members in their family.

According to the McClatchy news service, the measure unanimously passed by Congress “sets up new training and certification for the family caregivers, access to ongoing support services, counseling and mental-health services, respite care, medical care and a monthly personal-caregiver allowance.”

The news media has primarily credited Army Sgt. Ted Wade (a wounded Iraq veteran) and his wife Sarah, with lobbying for these expanded benefits. Congratulations to the Wades and all others who helped to get this bill to the president’s desk.

Indianapolis Reckless Driver Convicted On Six Counts in Death of Three

An Indianapolis jury today found a 20-year-old driver guilty of  six felonies arising from a December car crash that tragically took the life of three young friends who were passengers in his vehicle. The motorist was convicted on three counts of reckless homicide and three counts of operating a vehicle while intoxicated, causing death. Although the man denied being intoxicated at the time of the accident, he did admit drinking alcohol and smoking pot on the night of the crash.

According to news media accounts, on the night in question, the motorist was operating a Chevy Blazer about 60 mph in a 35-mph zone on Moller Road when he crossed over the center line and smashed into a tree. His BAC tested negative afterward, but that apparently was hours after the actual crash by which time he could have sobered up, according to trial evidence.

Sentencing is scheduled for May 26. He could receive up to 24 years behind bars. The man also could face a wrongful death civil lawsuit for money damages from the victims’ families.

If you or a family member have been injured in a car accident owing to the negligence or recklessness of another driver, or by a drunk driver, it is important to retain legal counsel with the experience and skills needed to obtain full compensation for your injuries in civil court. The accident lawyers at Young and Young in Indianapolis have represented thousands of Hoosiers with serious auto accident injuries. We have more than 55 years of Indiana personal injury experience waiting to help.

Alleged Drunk Driver, 21, Kills Girlfriend In Car Wreck

A public service announcement in heavy rotation on the radio dramatizes a the angst of a young drunk driver in the emergency room while doctors try to administer to his severely injured girlfriend. When it involves the triple threat of young adults, cars, and alcohol, life has a way sadly and tragically of imitating art.

According to local media,  a 21-year-old motorist who was driving drunk  at speeds of about 80 mph pl0wed into a residence in Zionsville, Indiana, on May 8 after running a stop sign. The driver’s girlfriend, a backseat passenger, died in the crash, while another passenger was injured. The homeowners were trapped in the rubble before being rescued.

After the driver, who has a one-year-old child with the deceased woman, was released from the hospital, he was taken into custody by the local sheriff’s department. The motorist is facing ten charges in the fatal accident, including reckless homicide and DUI. He is being held in Boone County Jail on a $25,000 bond. He apparently registered a BAC of 0.19, more than twice the state’s legal limit.

When it comes to new or relatively new drivers–or anyone with a license for that matter–the only sure way to avoid being a drunk driver is to never drive after you have been consuming alcohol.  For parents, please teach your children this truth; it may save their life and the lives of innocent Hoosiers and their families.

If, on the other hand, you or your family has been victimized by an intoxicated driver, please be aware that the accident attorneys at Indianapolis law firm of Young and Young work hard, using the civil justice system, to force drunk drivers to fairly compensate innocent drivers and passengers for the harm they caused. Contact our office today for a personal, no-cost consultation. We stand ready to help.

Indiana Concussion Injury Lawyer

John P. Young is your Indiana Concussion and Brain Injury Lawyer.  Mr. Young has more than 23 years experience handling brain injury cases for Hoosiers.  A member of Mr. Young’s family has been dealing with brain injury for more than 25 years.

Did you know that a concussion is a form of a brain injury?  You do not have to be knocked unconscious to have a concussion.  It is sufficient to have a period of altered awareness to have a concussion.  In the old days we would call this having your bell rung, or being knocked loopy.   Little did we understand about the significance of having your bell rung.   A recent clinical study by the Children’s National Medical Center in Washington found that more than 80 percent of student athletes who experienced concussions reported a significant worsening of symptoms over the first four weeks after attempting to return to school academics.  This would include dizziness, short term memory issues and headaches.  The demands of school put a burden on the circuitry of the brain.  Any impairment to that circuitry diminishes the ability to process information and perform in school.

Recent attention has been turned to the N.F.L. and the frequency of concussion in the league. Several players have reported debilitating injuries from concussion.  It would be very interesting to see studies done on the long term of effects of concussions have on older NFL players.  I remember seeing Chuck Bednarek standing over an unconscious Frank Gifford.  I remember Harold Carmichael, of the Philadelphia Eagles, receiving his seventh or eighth concussion.  I remember seeing the pain in Curt Warner’s expression as he retired from Professional Football due, in part, to a series of concussions.  The list is endless.  The collisions in high school athletics are not as severe, but possibly more damaging due to the stage of development.

The concussion clinic at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Ohio estimates that more than 400,000 concussions occurred among 7.5 million student athletes who participated in high school sports during the 2008-2009 school year.

If you or a family member suffers a brain injury as a result of the negligence of another, call John P. Young toll free at 1-888-639-5161, or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com.  Mr. Young guarantees there will be no fee charged unless we recover fair compensation for you.

Lawmakers Introduce National Teenage Driving Standards

It’s prom season in Indiana and around the country.  Most parents are well aware that teenagers and cars can be risky business, even under the best of circumstances.  But it’s perhaps the worst of circumstances, i.e., when alcohol is involved, that highway safety for all concerned could be most compromised. The  inexperience of teenagers with the effects of alcohol, their fearless and/or reckless attitude towards real danger, and their inexperience with the operation of the vehicle is a potent combination for real trouble on Indiana roads and throughout the country. Perhaps for this reason, three U.S. senators are co-sponsoring a bill that would establish the same licensing requirements for teenage drivers across the country regardless of jurisdiction, including raising the legal driving age.  Currently, each state establishes its own rules for drivers under 21.

The Safe Teen and Novice Driver Uniform Protection (STAND UP) Act–a one-size-fits-all measure–would strengthen safety on U.S. roads, according to its sponsors.  If enacted, the STAND UP law would establish a three-phase licensing process–learner’s permit, intermediate stage, and full non-restricted license. This is also referred to as a graduated driver licensing (GDL) program. According to USA Today, “There is little debate about the effectiveness of good GDL programs on highway safety. States that impose major restrictions have seen crash reductions of 10%-30%.”

The intermediate stage (a minimum of six months), which begins when the new driver’s learner’s permit expires, would remain in effect until the driver is 18 or older.

The law would also mandate the following:

  • Learner’s permits issued at age 16 or older (rather than 14 or 15), and non-restricted drivers licenses issued at age 18
  • Prohibit night driving during stage one and two
  • Prohibit the use of wireless devices during stage one and two except in emergencies
  • No more than one non-family member under the age of 21 may travel with driver operating on a learner’s permit, unless a licensed driver over the age of 21 is in the vehicle

States that decline to comply with the law would risk losing federal highway safety funding. With all the issues percolating on Capitol Hill right now, however, it remains to be seen if Congress will give serious consideration to this measure. Opponents claim it would infringe on the rights of states to enact driving requirements unique to each state’s needs.

John P. Young Wants to be Your Social Security Disability Lawyer

John P. Young wants to be your Indianapolis and Indiana Social Security Disability Lawyer.  Why should you want John P. Young to be your Indiana Social Security Disability Attorney or Lawyer?  Heck, you can call one of the advertisers easy enough.  Heck they must be good they are on TV.  Heck they must be good they are nationwide.  Well……  The national advertiser uses representatives that may not be lawyers.  The advertisers want high volume.  In order to maintain high volume you are treated like a sheep.  You will have little or no contact with a lawyer, you will be handled by a legal assistant. You will not be able to contact your representative by phone, or if you do, they will have little knowledge of your medical condition.

Truth is John P. Young is a lawyer trained to handle social security disability claims.  He has been representing only Hoosiers for more than 22 years.  He personally handles each claim.  He personally answers his phone calls.  He personally goes to each hearing.  He personally prepares you for your hearing.  When you hire John P. Young, you get John P. Young.  Mr. Young has spent thousands of hours learning the medicine that is vital to properly handling your social security disability claim.  Mr. Young has learned directly from hundreds of medical doctors who took their time to personally teach Mr. Young what he needed to know to represent his clients.  It makes no difference if your injury is from broken bones, spinal cord injury including paraplegia or quadriplegia, brain injury, amputation, burns, psychological concerns, blindness or any of the other reasons why a person might become disabled.  Over his 22 years of representing Hoosiers in their Social Security Disability claim, Mr. Young has learned the rules and regulations that are used to determine whether a person is disabled. He had to –  he wouldn’t be doing his clients any good if he had not.

It may be alright to buy a pair of shoes because the advertisement was cute, but you wouldn’t choose your doctor that way.  Why not you ask?  Because any bozo can advertise.  Do you want Bozo operating on you?  Do you want Bozo handling a claim that may mean the difference between being able to eat on a daily basis and going hungry or homeless?

Call John P. Young today about your Social Security Disability Claim.  Ask around, you will find no one better to handle your claim.  Ask Mr. Young about his experience.  Call him today toll free at 1 888-639-5161, or contact him on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com.

Northwestern Indiana Construction Zone Accident Claims One

Back in late March, a highway construction worker was killed by an alleged hit-and-run, drunk driver on I-94. Tragically, a similar ghastly highway accident has happened again. On April 30, a midnight shift construction worker was filling cracks  along westbound I-94 near Burns Harbor, Indiana, when he was run over by a motorist making an illegal U-turn and who then fled the scene. The worker, of Michigan City, Indiana, later died at Loyola University Medical Center. Police arrested the driver, age 21, of East Chicago, Indiana, a few hours later.  According to press accounts, the driver admitted that he drank too much while bar hopping that night. His blood alcohol content apparently registered a .124, well above the legal limit. Prosecutors have charged the man with five felonies.

Time and again, intoxicated motorists on Indiana roads cause serious injuries to other drivers and passengers such as amputations, paralysis, spinal cord injury, paraplegia, quadriplegia, brain injury, broken bones, and as in this case, a fatal accident. Based on our long-term legal representation of accident victims, we know that drunk drivers can devastate Hoosier families.

If you or a family member have been injured in a car accident by a driver operating a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol and drugs, it is important to retain legal counsel with the experience and skills needed to obtain full compensation for your injuries. At Young and Young in Indianapolis, we have represented thousands of Hoosiers with serious auto accident injuries. We have more than 55 years of experience waiting to help.

Doctors Still Don’t Know What Caused Rocker’s Brain Hemorrhage

Good news for rock musician Bret Michaels who, as well publicized, was rushed to the hospital on April 22 with an excruciating headache that turned out to be a subarachnoid hemorrhage (bleeding at the base of the brain). Michaels, who has reinvented himself as a reality TV star on the current installment of The Celebrity Apprentice as well as other unscripted shows, was just released from a Phoenix hospital, and may be able to resume touring in several months if all goes well in his treatment regimen. He still is suffering headaches and back spasms. However, doctors still don’t know what actually caused his condition.

According to Merck.com, “About 35% of people die when they have a subarachnoid hemorrhage due to an aneurysm because it results in extensive brain damage. Another 15% die within a few weeks because of bleeding from a second rupture.”

Michaels is no stranger to serious health issues. He is a Type-1 diabetic and also had  an emergency appendectomy on April 12. Michaels also fell off the stage while performing at the Tony Awards in June 2009, but there is no indication whether last week’s incident was related to what is sometimes called “second-impact syndrome.” Doctors apparently are discounting any connection between these previous episodes and Michaels’ latest health challenge.

A brain injury can happen in a number of different ways.  The most common cause of brain injury is a trauma in a slip-and-fall accident or an auto crash. If you or a loved one have been involved in an accident involving a blow to the head, see your doctor immediately, and follow the medical advice given. If the condition was the result of an injury caused by the negligence of someone else, legal representation is also important. Contact the experienced brain injury lawyers at Young & Young in Indianapolis for a private, confidential, and free consultation.

Indiana Social Security Lawyer – Married Couples Can Maximize Social Security Benefits

As a lawyer who represents Hoosiers before the Social Security Administration, I am often asked about benefits arising out of married life.  I recently read an interesting article in US News and World Report Magazine.  I wanted to share it with my readers.  I did not write this article and I give full credit to U.S. News and World Report for the Article.  I hope you enjoy it and learn a little in the process.

Six Ways For Married Couples to Maximize Social Security Benefits.

Couples who are currently married, or who have stayed together at least 10 years, tie their working records — and the resulting Social Security checks — together as long as they both live. In the case of Social Security payments, the result is often better for the couple. Spouses have Social Security claiming options that single people don’t. Here are a few ways couples can boost their Social Security benefits:

Utilize Spousal Payments

Spouses are entitled to a Social Security payout of up to 50 percent of the higher earner’s check if that amount is higher than benefits based on his or her own working record. Retired couples in which one spouse did not work or had low earnings have the most to gain from this provision. However, low-earning spouses must wait until what the Social Security Administration calls the “full retirement age” to collect the full 50 percent. (For baby boomers born between 1943 and 1954, the full retirement age is 66.) Benefits are reduced for spouses who collect before their full retirement age. For example, a low-earning spouse whose full retirement age is 66 would only be eligible for 35 percent of the higher earner’s benefit at age 62. The spousal benefit does not increase above 50 percent of the higher earner’s benefit if claiming is delayed beyond the full retirement age.

Claim and Suspend

The lower earner cannot receive spouse’s benefits until the higher earner files for retirement benefits. Workers who have reached their full retirement age may apply for retirement benefits and then request to have the payment suspended. Claiming and suspending payments allows the lower earner to claim a spousal benefit and the higher earner to continue working and earn delayed retirement credits until age 70. “This would tend to maximize their lifetime benefits and more importantly maximizes the survivor’s benefit,” says Andrew Biggs, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a former deputy commissioner of the Social Security Administration. “You will ensure you will have a higher benefit when you need one, which is when you are a widow later in life.” Social Security checks increase by 7 to 8 percent for each year of delayed claiming between your full retirement age and age 70. After age 70 there is no additional benefit for waiting to collect your due.

Claim Twice

Duel-earner couples who have reached their full retirement age can claim Social Security twice: first as a spouse and later using their own work record. A person may choose to sign up for only a spouse’s benefits at their full retirement age and continue accruing delayed retirement credits on their own Social Security record. The worker may then file for benefits based on their own work at a later date and receive a higher monthly benefit due to delayed retirement credits. For example, a man planning to retire at age 70 could claim a spouse’s benefit based on his wife’s earnings at age 66 and then claim again based on his own working record when he exits the workforce at age 70. High-income couples with relatively equal earnings gain the most using this strategy, according to calculations by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

Include Family

Social Security recipients who have children under age 16 or who are disabled can secure additional Social Security payments for the child and a spouse caring for the child, even if the spouse is under age 62. Each child is eligible for up to 50 percent of the retiree’s full benefit. However, payments to family members are capped, typically at 150 to 180 percent of the retiree’s benefit payment. If the total benefits due to the retiree’s spouse and children are above this limit, their benefits will be reduced. The retiree’s payout, however, will not be affected.

Ex-Spouses are Eligible

A former spouse may be eligible for benefits if the marriage lasted at least 10 years. The divorced spouse must be age 62 or older and unmarried. The amount of benefits an ex-spouse claims has no effect on the benefits the worker and her or her current spouse can receive.

Boost the Survivor’s Benefit

Widows and widowers are entitled to the higher earner’s full retirement benefit. Surviving spouses can begin receiving Social Security benefits at age 60, or age 50 if they are disabled. Benefits are reduced by up to 28.5 percent if claimed before the recipient’s full retirement age. The surviving member of a dual earner couple can also claim a reduced benefit on one working record and then switch to the other. For example, a woman could take a reduced widow’s benefit at age 60 and then claim 100 percent of the retirement benefits based on her own working record when she reaches her full retirement age. Most survivor benefits are paid to women because wives are generally younger than their husbands and live longer. A husband can increase the monthly survivor’s benefit his wife will receive by 60 percent by waiting to sign up for Social Security until age 70.

Copyrighted, U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.

The Sam Schmidt Foundation

The Sam Schmidt Foundation  is dedicated to curing paralysis.  Sam’s motto is “It’s not if, but when?”  Many of you may remember Sam Schmidt, a successful driver on the Indy Care open wheel circuit.  He injured his spinal cord while driving at the  Indianapolis 500 Mile track in Indianapolis.  Sam’s never say quit outlook has lead him on a journey to find the cure for paralysis and to help those dealing with spinal injury and paralysis to thrive and live full lives.  I first became aware of Sam’s Foundation when a very good friend and client injured his spinal cord and became quadriplegic.  While Bob was in the Rehabilitation Hospital in Indianapolis, trying to make sense of what happened to him and what he was going to do with the rest of his life, he was visited by none other than Sam. I was not present, but when I saw Bob after Sam’s visit, I detected a new sense of purpose for Bob.  He knew that his injuries were not the end of his life.  Bob knew there was much for him to do and achieve and he set out on that journey with a passion.

Sam’s mission statement, taken from his website:

Leading the Charge to Cure Paralysis.
The Sam Schmidt Paralysis Foundation helps individuals overcome spinal cord injuries and other neurological disorders by funding scientific research, medical treatment, rehabilitation and technological advances. This research also benefits stroke victims and people diagnosed with ALS, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.

Sam was injured in a professional motor sports car crash.  Bob was injured in a fall from a climbing tree stand.  Hoosiers across the state are injured in semi tractor-trailer crashes, or drunk driver accidents, or motorcycle collisions or construction accidents.  It does not matter how the spinal cord injury occurs.  What really matters is that the spinal cord injured Hoosier know that they and their family are not alone.  People like Sam Schmidt, and his foundation, are an inspiration to all.

At Young and Young, we are Indianapolis and Indiana spinal cord injury lawyers.  We have represented hundreds of Hoosiers with spinal cord injuries and have been doing so for more than 56 consecutive years.  If you would like to discuss the legal issues surrounding spinal cord injury, including, workers compensation, social security disability, private disability insurance or the liability of the person whose negligence caused the spinal cord injury, please contact Young and young toll free at 1-888-639-5161, or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com.  Your call is confidential.  We will meet with you personally wherever is required.  There is no fee for this consultation and we do not charge a fee unless we recover fair compensation for you.  Call today.

Alleged Drunk Driver With Two Kids In Car Crashes Into Tree

Yet another instance where a car operated by a suspected intoxicated driver can become a lethal weapon. A Muncie, Indiana, man driving his fiancée’s two young children home from daycare veered off the road and smashed head-on into a tree on Tuesday night at about 5:30 p.m. The driver as well as the children ages 5 and 2 were all wearing seat belts. However, the older child was flown to Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis for emergency surgery and is said to be in stable condition. The younger child only suffered minor injuries fortunately, and driver himself came through okay. According to local media, the driver told police he had consumed four beers and a couple of shots” four hours before the wreck. Blood and breathalyzer tests apparently indicate that the motorist was legally drunk. On a preliminary basis, the motorist has been charged with driving while intoxicated resulting in injury and two counts each of neglect of a dependent and driving while suspended causing injury. Police also notified Child Protective Services of the incident. The motorist, who is currently in Delaware County Jail, apparently has two priors for drunk driving.

Safety is everyone’s business. As we have said time and again, getting behind the wheel after having one too many can be one of the most dangerous things that a motorist can do. It jeopardizes the safety of the vehicle operator, his or her passengers including innocent children, and other motorists on Indiana roads.

Based on many years of experience, we know that drunk drivers can devastate Hoosier families. If you or a loved one have been seriously hurt by a driver under the influence, please contact the personal injury lawyers at Young and Young in Indianapolis to obtain full information about your legal rights to recover money damages in civil court.

Be Considerate on Earth Day and Every Day

Today is Earth day.  In celebration of caring for our home, the planet earth, I saw many Hoosiers walking and riding their bikes to work.  I celebrated the day with my ride in.  For those in cars, please be considerate of the biker and the walker.  As an Indiana/Indianapolis personal injury attorney, I saw many things on my six mile ride that made me cringe.  I pulled out of my drive and headed south.  At the first intersection a driver in an SUV while talking on the phone ran right through a stop sign.  The children in my neighborhood walk to school and there were children all about.  One of the other drivers at the intersection honked their horn and the distracted driver took her free hand off the wheel and gave the honker the single finger insult.  Her lack of empathy for the plight of the others using the road is appalling.  This is how car crashes injure people.  This is how semi tractor-trailer accidents occur.  It is this lack of respect for the well being of our fellow Hoosiers that allows a drunk to drive and cause a drunk driving accident.

Further on down the road (Eric Clapton) I saw a car following another car very closely, I would call it tailgating.  The speed limit on the road is thirty miles an hour and there are people on the sidewalks of both sides of the road, including children going to school.  The rear driver decides that their needs are more important than all the rest of the people in the area and pulls right of the first car, guns the engine and passes on the right.  The children on the sidewalk jumped to their left  out of fear.  The car did not enter their path, but if it lost control in that split second, I may have witnessed the wrongful death of a child.   The irony of the whole situation is that the idiot driver sped up to a stop light two blocks ahead and then sat there while the first car pulled up slowly behind them.  I passed them too.  I gave them my best “you should be ashamed look” and rolled on.

We all have to live together.  We can avoid traffic accidents and motorcycle accidents and highway accidents if we will just be a little more concerned about the welfare of our fellow creatures.

Suspected Drunk Driver Crashes After High-Speed Chase

Apart from the potential penalties imposed by law, common sense tells us not to drink and drive. Alcohol slows reaction times, impairs judgment, and leads to highway accidents. But if you happen to watch the popular TV show “Cops,” you also  know that it’s never a good idea to run from the police regardless of the circumstances (such as a long rap sheet or outstanding warrants).  Last Thursday night, a local man with four priors for drunken driving found that out. He led police on a pursuit where he weaved in and out of cars at up to 130 mph before losing control of his vehicle. According to the Indianapolis Star, he “crashed his red 1995 Mercedes at the split where eastbound I-70 meets northbound I-65 at about 11 p.m. Thursday. Police said the car drove into a ditch before going airborne over I-65 and landing at the bottom of a ravine.” Although he wasn’t buckled in, the man managed to avoid serious injury. Apparently no other vehicles were involved fortunately. The motorist submitted to both a breath and blood test after the accident. Police have charged him on a preliminary basis with operating a vehicle while intoxicated, reckless driving, felony operating a vehicle as a habitual violator, and criminal recklessness. Police indicated that the motorist was already designated as a habitual traffic violator for life under Indiana law (which could mean a lifetime license suspension) and possible jail time if found guilty in criminal court.

Drunk drivers on Indiana roads can cause serious injuries to other drivers and passengers such as amputations, paralysis, spinal cord injury, paraplegia, quadriplegia, brain injury, broken bones, and even wrongful death. The role of the civil court is to compensate victims for their injuries in these incidents by providing a forum for seeking money damages from offender. If you or a loved one have been seriously hurt by a driver under the influence, please contact the personal injury lawyers at Young and Young in Indianapolis. With more than 55 years of experience, we stand ready to assist.

Indiana Brain Injury Attorney

If you are interested in brain injury, you should consider becoming a member of the Brain Injury Association of Indiana.  You can contact them at www.biaiusa.org/IndianaThis is the contact point for families and friends of Hoosiers coping with brain injury.  The Association was founded by a group of Hoosier families who found themselves trying to help a loved one cope with the severe effects of a brain injury.  They found that there was no coordinated effort to help families deal with the needs of their loved one and thus started the Association to help themselves and Hoosiers who surely would follow.  The idea of the Association is to ensure that families and friends of brain injured Hoosiers have access, from a single point, to all information currently available about resources to help their loved ones cope with their brain injury.  The Association preaches prevention as the best way to deal with brain injury.  In many instances the effects of brain injury are permanent and life altering.  The best way to cope with brain injury is to prevent it.  The Association preaches bicycle safety, helmet use, and other ways to avoid brain injury.

The Association also is a fabulous educational resource.  The Association has many differing types of educational materials to help educate those new to the effects of brain injury.  The Association also holds seminars with speakers from all facets of the brain injury experience.  These folks range from neurologists and neurosurgeons, to neuropsychologists to rehabilitation specialists to adaptive living specialists.  Survivors  and their families are also speaking directly to those new to the issues.  Who better to help brain injured Hoosiers than Hoosiers who have already been down that path.  The Association sponsors support groups all over the State of Indiana.  These groups are wonderful for allowing you to tell your story, hear about how others are coping and the newest and best therapies to help.

John P. Young, as a former Chair of the Board of Directors, has the knowledge and experience to help you and your loved one obtain fair compensation for your injuries.  Contact Mr. Young toll free 1-888-639-5161 or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com for your private, confidential and no charge consultation.  We do not charge a fee until we successfully obtain fair compensation for you.

Bicycle Safety

John P. Young is your Indiana Injury Attorney. We have 22 years experience in matters involving personal injury.  We represent Hoosiers injured in highway accidents, semi tractor-trailer crashes, motorcycle accidents, car accidents, drunk driving accidents and crashes, construction accidents and more.  We deal with only serious personal injury including broken bones, spinal cord injury with paraplegia and quadriplegia, wrongful death, blindness, amputations. Today I would like to discuss bicycle safety.

I ride my bike to work two to three times a week.  The only time I won’t ride is when there is snow and ice on the roads.  I ride for a couple of reasons.  When I finish my ride to work and sit down at my desk my energy level is high and I feel alert.  I guess it is because of the fresh air and the heart pumping.  Whatever it is, it is better than coffee, no kidding.  I like to think riding is a green action I can take to make the world a better place for my children  and yours.  I think I am keeping my weight under control, but I should also do a few push aways from the table.

A few of the things I notice that can help people be safer on bikes include wearing bright clothing and having a front and rear flasher on your bike or clothes.  The key to avoiding injury is being seen by cars.  You would think in bright sunlight it would be easy to see a full grown man on a bike, but it isn’t.  Riders should go out of their way to be seen. Wear a helmet.  Most of the time we are in control on the bike, but in an instant that can change.  When it does, we may no be prepared and go over the handle bars.  If that happens it is likely we are going to hit our head on something.  An unprotected head is an easy target for brain injury.  Your brain is slammed as hard as your head is.  As your brain is really mostly like jello, it can be easily injured.  The brain injury can leave permanent life altering damage.  A helmet is an inexpensive way to minimize (not eliminate) the danger of a brain injury.

Always ride with traffic.  This seems to be a point of confusion.  Walk against traffic, ride with traffic.  This allows people who are turning from side streets into your path to more easily see you.  This is because they are looking for cars and while they are doing this they will likely see you.  If you are riding against traffic, the driver will look in the opposite direction of the way you are coming last, to avoid the car that might hit them. This is especially true on one way streets.

Finally, watch out for drivers talking on their cell phone.  Of the multitude of things on that drivers mind, you, on your bicycle is one of the last things.  You watch out for them.  They already are demonstrating an extremely careless attitude about their own safety and the safety of other drivers on the road.  Of all the dangerous things I have seen happen on the road in the last four years of riding my bike to work, most (say around 75%) have been done by people driving and talking on their cell phones.

Enjoy your ride, be safe.  If you are injured by another’s negligence while you are riding, call John P. Young for your personal, confidential and no charge consultation.  You may reach Mr. Young toll free at 1-888-6395161, or on the web at john@youngandyoungin.com.

Indiana Injury Attorney on Lost Carmel Teens

John P. Young is your Indiana/Indianapolis Injury Attorney.  Young and Young has served injured Hoosiers and their families since 1954.  The Young family has had a member of the family practicing in the Indianapolis Metropolitan area for more than 106 years, beginning with Howard S. Young, Sr. who began his practice in 1904.  Over those years we have helped Hoosiers who have been injured in many types of accidents, including highway accidents, semi tractor-trailer accidents, motorcycle accidents, construction accidents car crashes, explosions, bleacher collapses, injuries from defective products.  We are a full service law firm helping disabled people obtain their Social Security Disability Benefits.

We were saddened to read about the young man who made a decision based on inexperience and teenaged judgment to take his father’s car and take his two friends for a joy ride.  As is often the case youthful indiscretion and lack of experience combined to cost the two passengers their lives.  The way we see it, the criminal justice system is not an effective tool in this case to deter future behavior.  It is a tool, do not get me wrong, but putting this young man in jail, and teaching him how to become a criminal helps no one.  Instead, the criminal justice system should ensure that he speaks to other teens and spreads the word about the dangers of making a hasty and frightful decision.  The criminal justice system can put him on probation and keep an eye on him.  Hoepfully, that young man will obtain his high school diploma, and maybe a college degree, and honor the lives of those young men in the car by making a success of his life.  Success includes living his life for others.

What part does the civil justice system play here?  As our mothers have taught us, and as this young man’s mother surely taught him, he has made a mess, it is up to him to make up for it.  This can be done by encouraging his insurance company to compensate the families of the two you men for the costs associated with their funeral and burial, and the medical bills for the treatment they may have received after the collision.  The loss of a child rates as one of the most traumatic events a person can endure.  You are not supposed to survive your children.  Though the money from the insurance company cannot bring back those young men, making sure he makes up for the harm he caused includes compensation for the loss of love and affection caused to those families.

Godspeed, young man. Honor your friends by living a courageous life. Make up for the harm you caused as best you can.

NOTICE: No face-to-face meeting needed. You can remain safely in your home from case signup to settlement.

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