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I-70 mountain corridor west of Golden, Colorado. CGH Injury Lawyers represents catastrophic injury victims in Golden and Jefferson County from our Denver office.
Golden, Colorado

Golden Catastrophic Injury Lawyers Who Take Mountain-Corridor Cases All the Way to Verdict

A spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury, amputation, or severe burn suffered on the I-70 canyon, US-6, or SH-93 can impose lifetime costs no insurer's first check will cover. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Golden catastrophic injury clients from our Denver office, documents every future-care category the law allows, and files at the Jefferson County District Court in Golden when insurers refuse to pay what the evidence requires. You pay nothing unless we win.

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Serving Golden from our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • Golden sits at the mouth of the I-70 mountain corridor, where steep grades, sharp curves, and high-speed recreational and commercial traffic produce some of Jefferson County's most severe crash injuries. The city's position at the convergence of I-70, US-6 (6th Avenue), and SH-93 makes catastrophic crash outcomes a predictable pattern, not a rare event. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Golden office. We serve Golden from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, and file catastrophic injury cases at the Jefferson County District Court in Golden.
  • Deadlines run from different triggers. A motor vehicle crash on I-70 or US-6 gives you three years from the crash date to file a lawsuit under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). Most other catastrophic injury claims carry a two-year deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-102(1)(a). If a government vehicle or a public road defect contributed to the injury, a separate written notice must reach the right government entity within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1). Missing that notice can bar the government-entity portion of the claim entirely.
  • Colorado does not cap economic damages such as lifetime medical costs, lost earning capacity, adaptive equipment, or future attendant care. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is also uncapped under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025. In a Golden catastrophic case, the uncapped categories typically carry far more weight than the capped one.

Golden, Colorado, has a population of about 20,399 (2020 Census) and anchors the eastern approach to the Rocky Mountain foothills in Jefferson County. Three distinct corridors converge here: I-70 continues west into the canyon, US-6 connects to Denver's west side, and SH-93 runs north toward Black Hawk. That convergence of high-speed traffic, mountain terrain, and route transitions makes Golden one of the more concentrated catastrophic injury environments on the Front Range. When a crash on those roads, a premises event, or another serious incident permanently alters someone's life, the legal claim demands proof that goes far beyond the first round of medical bills. CGH Injury Lawyers builds that proof, advances the cost of doing so, and does not collect a fee unless we win.

Why Golden is different

What the I-70 mountain corridor means for a catastrophic injury claim near Golden

Most catastrophic injury cases in Colorado involve corridors where speed, vehicle type, and road design interact badly. Golden's three corridors each add their own layer to that risk profile, and each one creates legal dimensions that do not appear on a flat suburban arterial. Understanding how the geography shapes the crash also helps identify every party who may share legal responsibility.

  1. I-70 Canyon: speed, grade, and mixed traffic

    The I-70 segment that climbs westward from the Golden interchange is a federally designated interstate carrying commuter traffic, ski-season recreational vehicles, and commercial trucks on grades and curves that are dramatically different from the flat portions of the same highway east of the city. On downhill segments, the speed differential between a commercial vehicle that has slowed for the grade and a passenger car at highway speed compresses reaction time to near zero. Winter conditions shorten that window further: ice forms unpredictably between the Front Range microclimate and the higher-elevation mountain segment, and stopping distances at I-70 speeds on a steep grade bear no resemblance to stopping on a dry surface street. A crash at those speeds on that terrain regularly produces the injuries that carry the most legal weight: spinal cord damage, traumatic brain injury, and crush injuries with lasting impairment. The resulting claim is not one an adjuster can close on the initial medical summary alone.

  2. US-6 (6th Avenue): expressway speed, interchange conflict

    US-6 functions as a high-speed expressway connecting Golden to Denver's west side, moving commuter traffic at speeds that belong on a full interstate. The interchanges near Golden, including the US-6 and I-70 connection point, concentrate merging and lane-change conflicts where an inattentive or aggressive driver can produce a broadside or rear-end collision without meaningful warning. Because US-6 is not a full limited-access interstate, some of the design margins that protect drivers on I-70 are absent. The consequence of a high-speed collision on US-6 near Golden can be the same as on the canyon: permanent neurological injury, amputation, or organ damage that requires lifetime medical management.

  3. SH-93: two lanes, open terrain, long emergency response

    State Highway 93 runs north from Golden through undivided two-lane foothills terrain toward Black Hawk and Clear Creek County. Traffic includes local commuters, recreational motorcyclists, cyclists, and casino-destination drivers, often at speeds that the road's curves and sight distances do not safely support. Head-on and run-off-road collisions on SH-93 produce serious injuries in part because the road provides little margin for error and in part because emergency response times on the more remote portions are longer than on urban corridors. The time between crash and trauma care can determine whether a brain or spinal injury leaves a person with partial function or no function at all. When that gap contributes to the severity of the outcome, it becomes part of the damages picture.

  4. Downtown Golden and Washington Avenue: pedestrian and premises exposure

    Inside the city, the Washington Avenue corridor and the streets surrounding the Colorado School of Mines campus generate a steady mix of pedestrian traffic, cyclists, delivery vehicles, and unfamiliar visitors. Catastrophic pedestrian and cyclist injuries near commercial districts, retail centers along South Golden Road, and event venues require a different evidentiary approach than a highway crash: the fault analysis involves driver behavior, crosswalk design, property owner responsibility, and whether the environment met reasonable safety standards for the volume of foot traffic it regularly attracts.

What qualifies

What counts as a catastrophic injury under Colorado law?

Colorado courts do not apply a single statutory label to catastrophic injury claims. The legal question is whether the harm is permanent and life-altering in ways that change medical care, work capacity, independence, or family life across years or decades. A diagnosis at the emergency department does not settle that question. The answer comes from medical records, provider opinions, functional assessments, and a documented picture of how the injured person's life changed after the incident.

Injuries that commonly qualify

  • Traumatic brain injury producing lasting cognitive deficits, memory impairment, behavioral changes, or the need for ongoing supervision or structured daily support
  • Spinal cord injury at any level, from incomplete injuries requiring mobility assistance to complete injuries resulting in paraplegia or quadriplegia
  • Amputation requiring prosthetics, home modifications, and vocational retraining, with replacement costs that extend across a working lifetime
  • Severe burn injuries covering significant body surface area and requiring multiple surgeries, skin grafting, reconstructive procedures, and long-term wound management
  • Permanent organ damage requiring transplant evaluation, ongoing dialysis, or lifetime medication management that prevents return to prior function

Why the classification matters for a Golden case

  • It determines which Colorado damage categories are uncapped and therefore where the bulk of the claim's value comes from. Economic losses and compensation for physical impairment are both uncapped; pain and suffering is not.
  • It shapes the scope of future-care documentation needed before any settlement discussion can be meaningful. An insurer's early offer made before that documentation is complete is almost always less than what the law allows.
  • It determines whether a government-entity notice under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury, a separate and earlier clock than the main filing deadline.
  • AMA Guides whole-person impairment ratings are the measurement tool Colorado courts use to quantify permanent injury. A documented rating from a qualified physician connects the clinical diagnosis to the legal damages framework.
Local knowledge

Golden courts. Golden trauma care. Golden roads.

A Golden catastrophic injury case lives in specific places: the road or property where the harm happened, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where the lawsuit may be decided. Knowing those places and how they affect your claim is part of the work CGH does from the first call.

Courthouse

Jefferson County District Court, Golden (1st Judicial District)

A Golden catastrophic injury lawsuit above the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed in Colorado's 1st Judicial District at the Jefferson County District Court, 100 Jefferson County Pkwy, Golden, CO 80401. The courthouse is not in a distant county seat: it sits inside the city of Golden itself. That means the jury pool is drawn from the local community, the defense firms that practice regularly before 1st Judicial District judges are the specific lawyers across the table, and the procedural landscape is one CGH knows well. The 1st Judicial District also covers Gilpin and Clear Creek counties, so catastrophic injury cases that originate on mountain corridors to the west of Golden, including crashes that happen deeper in the I-70 canyon or on SH-93 north of the city, often end up in the same courthouse. CGH Injury Lawyers handles 1st Judicial District catastrophic injury cases directly from our Denver office.

Trauma Care

St. Anthony Hospital (Lakewood, Level I Trauma) and Lutheran Medical Center

Golden does not have a hospital within city limits. St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, approximately seven miles from Golden, is a Level I Trauma Center: staffed and equipped around the clock for the most severe injuries, including the spinal, brain, and crush injuries that result from high-speed crashes on I-70 and US-6. Lutheran Medical Center is approximately eight miles from Golden and handles a broad range of serious injuries for Jefferson County residents. When a catastrophic injury in Golden sends someone to either facility, the medical records, imaging, operative reports, therapy notes, provider restrictions, and billing statements from those hospitals become the evidentiary foundation of the damages claim. We work with those records from the beginning of every case, not only after a lawsuit is filed. Colorado is also home to Craig Hospital in Englewood, nationally ranked for spinal cord and traumatic brain injury rehabilitation, and cases that involve extended rehabilitation at that level require documentation that accounts for Colorado-specific pricing rather than national average costs.

High-Crash Roads

I-70, US-6 (6th Avenue), and SH-93

Three distinct corridors converge at Golden and each generates a different catastrophic injury profile. The I-70 segment west of the Golden interchange climbs into the foothills through steep grades and tight curves, mixing ski-season recreational traffic with commercial trucks and daily commuters. Rear-end and run-off-road crashes at interstate speeds on downhill mountain grades produce some of the most severe trauma outcomes in Jefferson County. US-6 (6th Avenue) operates as an expressway-style arterial between Golden and Denver, carrying high commuter volumes where the interchange connections near Golden concentrate merging conflicts and lane-change collisions that can be as severe as those on I-70 itself. SH-93 is a two-lane undivided highway running north from Golden through open foothills terrain toward Black Hawk. The combination of inadequate sight distances at certain curves, the mix of motorcycle and casino-bound traffic, and limited immediate emergency response beyond the city edge makes SH-93 a corridor where serious injuries occur faster than help can arrive. All three routes fall within the Jefferson County District Court's jurisdiction and within the reach of St. Anthony Hospital's Level I Trauma unit in Lakewood.

Protecting your claim

What to do after a catastrophic injury near Golden

The choices made in the days and weeks immediately after a catastrophic injury on I-70, US-6, SH-93, or a Golden property shape whether the claim can be built to its full value. These steps protect the evidence and the legal rights of the injured person from the moment care begins.

  1. Reach the right level of trauma care

    Serious injuries from I-70 and US-6 corridor crashes near Golden are typically stabilized at St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, approximately seven miles from the city, a Level I Trauma Center operating around the clock. Lutheran Medical Center, about eight miles away, handles a range of serious Jefferson County injuries as well. Even injuries that feel manageable at the scene can hide neurological damage or internal trauma. Get examined, follow every provider recommendation without gaps, and keep every record from the emergency visit forward. Delays in care can affect both recovery and the ability to connect the injury to its cause at a later date.

  2. Preserve scene evidence before it disappears

    Photographs, dashcam footage, and commercial surveillance video from I-70 and US-6 near Golden can be overwritten or deleted within days of a crash. Preserve everything: the condition of the road surface, vehicle positions, weather and lighting conditions, skid marks, guardrail damage, sight-distance problems on SH-93, ice at an interchange ramp, or any physical condition on a Golden property that contributed to the injury. Collect witness names and contact information before people leave the scene. The official crash or incident report from the Colorado State Patrol or Golden Police Department establishes the initial government record, but it does not substitute for the physical evidence that locks down fault.

  3. Track the government-entity notice clock

    If a CDOT maintenance failure, a government vehicle, or a public road defect on I-70, US-6, or SH-93 contributed to the injury, a written notice of claim must reach the appropriate government entity within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1). That clock runs from the date of discovery, not from the crash date, but in practice the two dates are often close. Missing the notice deadline eliminates the government-entity claim regardless of how clear the underlying facts are. Call us before that window closes.

  4. Do not settle before the full picture is clear

    Insurers move quickly after catastrophic crashes on I-70 and US-6 near Golden. An early offer, delivered while someone is still in the hospital or just beginning rehabilitation, is made before lifetime care costs, vocational loss, and long-term impairment are documented. A release signed at that stage closes the claim before the most valuable categories of recovery can be proven. The three-year filing deadline for motor vehicle cases under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n) provides time to document the injury properly. Use it.

  5. Contact CGH before speaking to the insurer

    The at-fault party's insurer begins building its defense from the moment the crash is reported. A recorded statement given before treatment is complete, or before the future medical picture is clear, can be used to minimize the claim. Do not give a recorded statement and do not sign any document from the insurer before speaking with an attorney. CGH Injury Lawyers offers a free consultation to every Golden and Jefferson County catastrophic injury client. Call (303) 209-9395.

  6. CGH builds the evidence and the case

    We gather crash reports, medical records from St. Anthony and any subsequent treatment facilities, employment records, insurance policies across every possible source, and evidence of future-care needs. When the insurer refuses to recognize what the evidence requires, we file at the Jefferson County District Court, 100 Jefferson County Pkwy, Golden, CO 80401, and prepare the case for trial in the 1st Judicial District.

Compensation

What you can recover after a catastrophic injury near Golden

Colorado separates damages into categories, and the distinction matters enormously in a catastrophic case. The categories that carry the most value in serious I-70 and US-6 cases near Golden are the uncapped ones. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are subject to a cap, but that cap rarely determines the outcome of a catastrophic injury claim where lifetime economic losses and physical impairment are properly documented.

Economic damages (never capped)

  • All past medical costs from St. Anthony Hospital, Lutheran Medical Center, or any subsequent treatment facility, including surgery, imaging, rehabilitation, and medications
  • Projected lifetime medical costs and attendant care needs, documented through records and qualified expert opinion rather than estimates from memory
  • Home modifications: ramps, accessible bathrooms, widened doorways, structural changes required by a permanent mobility impairment
  • Adaptive vehicles and specialized equipment, including replacement costs built across the client's projected lifespan
  • Lost wages from the injury date through recovery, plus loss of future earning capacity when permanent restrictions prevent returning to prior work
  • Vocational rehabilitation and retraining when a permanent impairment requires a change in occupation or work environment

Non-economic and other damages

  • Pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life: capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5
  • Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement: not capped at all under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. High-speed crash injuries on I-70 and US-6 that cause visible and permanent physical change belong here
  • Loss of consortium when a spouse or dependent family member is affected by the permanent injury
  • If a government entity shares responsibility, recovery from that entity is separately capped at $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 per occurrence for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026, under C.R.S. 24-10-114. Private defendants are not limited by those government caps

How comparative fault plays out on Golden's corridors

Colorado follows a modified comparative fault rule under C.R.S. 13-21-111. An injured person can still recover as long as their share of fault is less than 50 percent, but the recovery is reduced by that percentage. If fault reaches 50 percent or more, the injured person recovers nothing. On the I-70 canyon and US-6 near Golden, where speed, road design, and weather conditions can all be disputed, insurers regularly try to push the injured party's assigned fault percentage as high as possible to reduce or eliminate the claim. A person found 49 percent at fault still recovers 51 percent of the proven damages. Defending against inflated fault arguments with physical evidence, crash reconstruction, and weather records is a central part of every catastrophic case CGH builds.

Why future-care documentation drives catastrophic claim value

Because economic damages are never capped and compensation for physical impairment is never capped, a Golden catastrophic case often turns on how completely future needs are documented before settlement. Health insurance covers medically necessary treatment. It does not cover lifetime attendant care, adaptive vehicles, home modifications, or vocational retraining. Those categories require expert documentation that connects a specific clinical diagnosis to a specific projected cost, using Colorado pricing rather than national averages. The economic category also benefits from the collateral source rule: the at-fault party cannot shrink its obligation simply because the injured person carries health insurance. The full economic need, documented through qualified opinions and provider records, is what the law requires the defendant to address.

Your team

The Golden catastrophic injury team behind your case

CGH Injury Lawyers is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly Cheney Galluzzi and Howard. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA) and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized by Best Lawyers every year since 2023. Every Golden catastrophic injury case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney who files and tries cases in the 1st Judicial District at the Jefferson County District Court in Golden, not by a paralegal. We are built for these cases.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict 1st Judicial District experience Bilingual EN / ES We advance future-care documentation costs No fee unless we win

One thing we state plainly: CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Golden office. We serve Golden catastrophic injury clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We come to you when needed, file cases at the Jefferson County District Court at 100 Jefferson County Pkwy in Golden, and try cases in the 1st Judicial District. There is no additional charge for Golden clients. What you get is the preparation and the result, not a storefront on Washington Avenue.

I wish I could leave more than 5 stars!
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Frequently asked questions

Golden catastrophic injury frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a catastrophic injury claim after a crash on I-70 or US-6 near Golden?

For a crash caused by a motor vehicle on I-70, US-6, or SH-93, Colorado gives you three years from the crash date to file a lawsuit under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). That three-year rule covers car, truck, motorcycle, bicycle, and pedestrian crashes when a motor vehicle is the cause. Most other catastrophic injury claims, such as a fall from a property, carry a two-year general-tort deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-102(1)(a). If a government entity contributed to the injury, a written notice of claim must also reach the right agency within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1). That is a separate and earlier clock. Confirm your specific deadlines with an attorney as early as possible.

Does Colorado cap what I can recover after a catastrophic injury near Golden?

Economic damages such as lifetime medical expenses, future attendant care, lost earning capacity, adaptive equipment, and home modifications are never capped under Colorado law. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is also not capped at all under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. In a serious I-70 or US-6 crash case near Golden, the uncapped economic and impairment categories typically carry far more value than the capped non-economic category. If a government entity is involved, a separate cap of $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 per occurrence applies to that entity's share of liability for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026, under C.R.S. 24-10-114.

What if I was partly at fault for the crash that caused my injury near Golden?

You can still recover under Colorado's modified comparative fault rule, C.R.S. 13-21-111, as long as you were less than 50 percent at fault. Your award is reduced by your share of fault. A person found 49 percent at fault still recovers 51 percent of the proven damages. If fault reaches 50 percent or more, you recover nothing. On I-70 and US-6 near Golden, where weather conditions, road design, and driver behavior can all be disputed, insurers actively try to push the injured person's fault percentage as high as possible. Challenging those assignments with physical evidence, crash reconstruction, and expert testimony is a routine part of every Golden catastrophic case we handle.

Which hospital handles catastrophic injuries near Golden?

St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, approximately seven miles from Golden, is a Level I Trauma Center and handles the most severe crash injuries from the I-70, US-6, and SH-93 corridors around the clock. Lutheran Medical Center, approximately eight miles from Golden, treats a broad range of serious Jefferson County injuries as well. For spinal cord and traumatic brain injury rehabilitation, Craig Hospital in Englewood is nationally recognized and sets the standard Colorado courts and defense experts apply to future-care projections. Records from every facility where treatment occurs form the medical backbone of a catastrophic injury claim, and CGH coordinates those records from the beginning of every case.

Where would a Golden catastrophic injury lawsuit be filed?

A Golden catastrophic injury lawsuit above the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed at the Jefferson County District Court, 100 Jefferson County Pkwy, Golden, CO 80401, in Colorado's 1st Judicial District. The courthouse is located inside the city of Golden itself. The 1st Judicial District also covers Gilpin and Clear Creek counties, so crashes that happen on the mountain corridors west or north of Golden can end up in the same courthouse. CGH Injury Lawyers files and tries 1st Judicial District cases directly from our Denver office at no additional charge to Golden clients. Most cases settle before trial, but knowing where the case would go and who would be on the jury shapes how we build and value the claim from day one.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have an office in Golden?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers has one office, at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, reachable at (303) 209-9395. We serve Golden and Jefferson County catastrophic injury clients from that office, file cases at the Jefferson County District Court in Golden, and come to you for meetings when needed. There is no additional fee for Golden clients. We handle consultations in English and Spanish.

It's More Than Money.

A permanent injury near Golden changes everything. We handle the rest.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Serving Golden and all of Jefferson County from our Denver office. Available in English and Spanish.

Read next: Colorado catastrophic injury law: what your claim must prove statewide

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205 · Serving Golden and Jefferson County