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I-25 North corridor through Northglenn, Colorado in Adams County. CGH Injury Lawyers represents spinal cord injury victims in Northglenn and Adams County from our Denver office.
Northglenn, Colorado

Northglenn Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers Who Size Your Claim to Decades of Real Care

A spinal cord injury on I-25, 104th Avenue, or anywhere in Adams County can end your ability to work and move as you did before. The first insurance offer rarely reflects 40 to 60 years of care costs. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Northglenn spinal cord injury victims from our Denver office, files in Adams County when insurers refuse to be fair, and collects nothing unless we win for you.

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Serving Northglenn 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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  • Northglenn sits on the I-25 North corridor, one of Adams County's highest-injury freeway segments. High-speed crashes on I-25 and the 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue commercial corridors are among the most common causes of catastrophic spinal cord injuries for people in this city. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Northglenn office. We serve Northglenn from our Denver office and file Adams County spinal cord injury cases at the Adams County District Court in Brighton when insurers refuse to be fair.
  • The filing deadline for most Colorado spinal cord injury claims against private defendants is two years under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If a motor vehicle crash caused the injury, the deadline is three years under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). When a government entity is involved, a written notice of claim must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1), or the claim against that entity is barred entirely.
  • Colorado's modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111) allows you to recover as long as your share of fault is less than 50 percent. Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. A person found 49 percent at fault in a $3 million case recovers $1.53 million. At 50 percent or more, recovery drops to zero. Insurers on Adams County high-speed corridors apply this rule aggressively, and disputing their fault assignments is often where the real money is saved or lost.

Northglenn is an Adams County city bordered by the I-25 North freeway and bisected by the 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue commercial corridors, a combination that produces recurring high-severity crash exposure for the people who live and work here. When those crashes leave someone with a cervical, thoracic, or lumbar spinal cord injury, the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center's 2025 data sheet estimates projected lifetime care costs ranging from about $3 million for paraplegia to more than $6.2 million for a high cervical injury in a person injured at age 25, in 2024 dollars. CGH Injury Lawyers brings in the life care planners, spinal neurologists, and forensic economists to document those decades of cost and build a claim that reflects the real number, not the insurer's opening offer.

The Northglenn risk profile

Why Northglenn's road network produces spinal cord injury claims

The combination of high-speed freeway traffic, dense commercial arterials, and on-ramp merge conflicts creates a specific injury exposure for Northglenn residents. Understanding where these injuries happen is the first step in identifying who is responsible and what the claim is worth.

  1. I-25 freeway-speed collisions

    I-25 runs along Northglenn's eastern edge, carrying dense commuter and freight traffic between Denver and the northern suburbs at highway speeds. The interchanges at 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue concentrate rear-end crashes, sideswipe collisions, and merge conflicts where traffic slows abruptly. At freeway speeds, these impact types produce forces capable of fracturing vertebrae and compressing or severing the spinal cord. A person ejected or subjected to violent forward deceleration on this stretch faces the injury patterns most likely to result in paraplegia or tetraplegia.

  2. 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue turning-movement crashes

    The 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue corridors carry high volumes of turning traffic generated by Northglenn's commercial strips, retail centers, and driveway access points. Left-turn collisions across multiple lanes, angle crashes at signalized intersections, and strikes against pedestrians near high-foot-traffic retail zones are recurring patterns on both corridors. A T-bone or broadside impact at an unsignalized driveway opening or at a controlled intersection where a driver ran a signal can deliver lateral forces to the occupant's cervical spine that standard seat restraints do not prevent.

  3. US-36 speed-differential transitions

    US-36 runs near Northglenn's southwestern boundary, connecting this part of Adams County to Denver and Westminster. Drivers entering US-36 from Northglenn surface streets must manage a speed-differential transition from arterial to highway conditions. The compressing following distances during peak-hour commutes on US-36 elevate rear-end risk at the points where local traffic enters the highway. Rear-end crashes at highway speeds, even at 40 to 50 miles per hour, can produce cervical fractures and disc injuries sufficient to damage the spinal cord.

  4. Premises falls producing spinal cord injuries

    Northglenn's concentrated commercial development along 104th and 120th avenues also produces premises-liability spinal cord claims. A fall from a significant height, a tumble down an unguarded stairway, or a slip on an icy commercial entrance that sends a person backward onto concrete can produce thoracic or lumbar fractures. Spinal cord injuries from falls, while less common than vehicle-crash injuries, still result in permanent disability and carry the same lifetime care costs as crash-caused injuries at the same neurological level.

The medical and legal framework

How the neurological level of your injury determines what the Adams County claim is worth

The insurer's adjuster calculates reserves the moment the injury level is known. That number comes from two facts: where on the spinal cord the injury occurred and whether it is complete or incomplete. Both facts also determine the projected lifetime care cost, which is the foundation of every dollar in the case.

  1. Cervical injuries (C1 to C8): the highest-cost, highest-stakes claims

    Injuries to the cervical region affect all four limbs and produce tetraplegia. C1 through C4 injuries often require ventilator support and 24-hour attendant care, with annual care costs the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center puts at up to $244,879 per year after the first year, in 2024 dollars, for the most severe levels. Estimated lifetime care for a high cervical injury in a 25-year-old exceeds $6.2 million, in 2024 dollars, under the NSCISC's 2025 data sheet. C5 through C8 injuries preserve progressively more arm and hand function but still require substantial attendant care, adapted equipment, and home modification. Colorado's altitude adds respiratory risk for cervical patients with compromised breathing function, and adapted vehicle conversions cost more in this region than national averages reflect.

  2. Thoracic injuries (T1 to T12): paraplegia with preserved arm function

    Thoracic injuries paralyze the legs while leaving arms and hands intact. People with T1 through T6 injuries manage wheelchair mobility with full upper body strength and typically live independently with accessible home modifications. The NSCISC's 2025 data sheet estimates lifetime care for paraplegia at about $3 million for a 25-year-old, in 2024 dollars. In the Denver metro, accessible home modification costs are elevated by a competitive housing market and by the proportion of older Northglenn homes that lack ground-level entry options, making structural renovation more expensive than national benchmarks suggest.

  3. Lumbar and sacral injuries (L1 to S5): incomplete function loss

    Lumbar and sacral injuries often allow some preserved leg movement and may permit walking with bracing. But they regularly produce bowel and bladder dysfunction that requires lifetime management, repeated surgical interventions, and ongoing supplies. Defense lawyers frequently treat lumbar injuries as minor relative to cervical cases. They are not. Across decades, the cost of managing lower-level injuries is still substantial, and the functional limitations, including chronic pain, sexual dysfunction, and reduced employment capacity, are real and compensable.

  4. Complete versus incomplete: the ASIA grade drives every number

    The ASIA Impairment Scale grades spinal cord injuries from A through E. ASIA A is a complete injury, meaning no motor or sensory function exists below the neurological level. ASIA B through D are incomplete injuries with varying degrees of preserved sensation or movement. Incomplete injuries are harder to value precisely because recovery trajectories are uncertain for 12 to 18 months after the crash. Insurers take full advantage of that uncertainty, presenting early settlement offers premised on optimistic projections that frequently fail to materialize. A claim accepted at ASIA C before plateau can be millions short of the person's actual long-term functional status.

The NSCISC's 2025 data sheet puts recurring annual care costs at $55,900 to $244,879 depending on injury level, in 2024 dollars, not counting first-year acute care costs. Over 40 years, those figures compound, and the Medical Consumer Price Index, which historically rises 3 to 4 percent per year, pushes the real cost further. A life care plan built by certified planners who account for that inflation is the difference between a settlement that runs out in 15 years and one that covers the full remaining life span.

Local knowledge

Northglenn courts. Northglenn trauma care. Northglenn roads.

A Northglenn spinal cord injury claim lives in Adams County from the day of the crash through any eventual trial. The courthouse where the case is filed, the hospital where treatment begins, and the road where the crash happened are all part of the claim. Here is the ground we work on for every Adams County SCI case.

Courthouse

Adams County District Court, Brighton (17th Judicial District)

Northglenn is in Adams County, which is part of Colorado's 17th Judicial District. A Northglenn spinal cord injury lawsuit above the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed at the Adams County District Court, located at 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601. The 17th Judicial District covers Adams County and Broomfield County. Adams County sits at the core of the I-25 North corridor, and the district court handles a substantial volume of motor-vehicle catastrophic injury litigation reflecting that traffic density. Local court procedures, the Adams County jury pool, and the defense firms that regularly appear in the 17th District differ from neighboring counties, and CGH Injury Lawyers files and tries 17th Judicial District spinal cord injury cases directly from our Denver office.

Trauma Care

North Suburban Medical Center and SCL Health Good Samaritan Medical Center

North Suburban Medical Center is the closest acute-care facility to Northglenn and handles a high volume of crash and trauma cases from the I-25 North corridor. SCL Health Good Samaritan Medical Center provides additional acute-care and surgical capacity for Adams County residents when North Suburban cannot provide a required level of specialized care. For the most severe spinal cord injuries, patients may be transferred from either facility to a Level I trauma center in Denver or Aurora for specialized spinal surgery and intensive care. Many Northglenn-area spinal cord injury patients then enter inpatient rehabilitation at Craig Hospital in Englewood, one of the country's leading spinal cord rehabilitation programs. The medical records and billing documentation from every facility along that chain, from the first emergency room visit through discharge from rehabilitation, form the backbone of the damages claim. We coordinate across all treating facilities starting at the free case evaluation.

High-Risk Roads

I-25, US-36, 104th Avenue, and 120th Avenue

Northglenn borders the I-25 North corridor, a high-volume freeway where commuter and freight traffic generates the merge conflicts, rear-end crashes, and sideswipe collisions most likely to produce spinal cord injuries. The interchanges at 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue are where speed differentials between mainline and deceleration lanes concentrate impact energy. US-36 runs along Northglenn's southwestern boundary, linking the city to Denver and Westminster, and adding a second highway transition zone to the city's crash exposure. The 104th Avenue and 120th Avenue corridors themselves carry dense turning traffic through commercial strips lined with driveways and signalized intersections, generating the left-turn and angle-collision patterns associated with lateral spinal loading. When any of these roads contributes to a spinal cord injury, we investigate every responsible party, including the City of Northglenn, Adams County, or CDOT if a road defect or signaling failure played a role, because any government-entity involvement triggers the 182-day notice requirement under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act.

After the injury

What to do after a spinal cord injury in Northglenn

The actions taken in the first days and weeks after a spinal cord injury matter enormously to what the family can ultimately recover. These steps protect both the injured person's health and the legal rights the claim depends on.

  1. Get to the right level of medical care and stay in treatment

    Serious Northglenn crashes typically send injured people first to North Suburban Medical Center, the closest acute-care hospital to the city. When the injury requires specialized spinal surgery or intensive monitoring, transfer to a Denver or Aurora Level I trauma center follows. Inpatient rehabilitation often continues at Craig Hospital in Englewood for the most severe cases. Follow every treatment recommendation, attend every follow-up, and keep every record. A gap in treatment that the defense can frame as evidence the injury was not serious can undermine the life care plan and reduce recovery.

  2. Preserve physical evidence before it disappears

    Surveillance and dashcam footage from the I-25 interchange area, from the 104th and 120th Avenue commercial strips, and from business parking lots can be overwritten within 24 to 72 hours. Skid marks fade with weather and road maintenance. The Adams County crash report and any Colorado State Patrol incident report are timestamped records of the scene. We move quickly to request and preserve this evidence at the start of every case so that nothing critical disappears before the investigation is complete.

  3. Identify every government entity and watch the 182-day CGIA clock

    If the crash that caused your spinal cord injury involved a City of Northglenn vehicle, an Adams County fleet vehicle, a CDOT maintenance truck, or a defect on a government-maintained road surface, the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act requires a written notice of claim within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1). That notice period runs from the date of discovery of the injury, not necessarily the crash date. Missing that deadline bars the government-entity claim entirely, regardless of how strong the evidence is. Call us early so we can identify whether a government entity is involved and protect that notice window.

  4. Do not give a recorded statement or accept any early offer

    The at-fault driver's insurer will contact you quickly. Do not agree to a recorded statement and do not sign any release before speaking with an attorney. Recorded statements are used to build a fault argument that exploits Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule under C.R.S. 13-21-111. Early settlement offers, which often arrive before the ASIA grade is fully understood and long before a life care plan exists, routinely represent a fraction of actual lifetime costs for a cervical or thoracic injury.

  5. File before the statute of limitations closes

    Most Colorado spinal cord injury claims against private defendants carry a two-year filing deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If a motor vehicle crash caused the injury, that deadline extends to three years under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). Building a life care plan, retaining neurological and economic experts, and completing a full liability investigation take time. Contact CGH Injury Lawyers as early as possible so no deadline creates a preventable barrier to full recovery.

Compensation

What a Northglenn spinal cord injury claim can recover under Colorado law

Colorado law allows spinal cord injury victims to recover the full documented economic cost of paralysis and the human cost of living with permanent disability. Because economic damages are never capped, the life care plan is the most powerful document in the case. It is the difference between what an insurer wants to pay and what four or five decades of paralysis actually costs.

Economic damages (uncapped in Colorado)

  • Attendant care and other recurring care expenses, which the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center estimates at $55,900 to $244,879 per year depending on injury level, in 2024 dollars
  • Power wheelchair purchase, maintenance, and replacement approximately every five years
  • Accessible home modification in the Denver metro, where the cost depends on the structure and the entry layout of the existing property
  • Adapted vehicle conversion and transportation costs
  • Medical supplies, medications, bowel and bladder management, pressure-sore prevention, and periodic surgical procedures across decades
  • Lost wages, lost benefits, and reduced lifetime earning capacity
  • Future medical care projected forward with inflation using the Medical Consumer Price Index, which historically rises 3 to 4 percent per year

Non-economic and other damages

  • Pain and suffering, capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5
  • Emotional distress and the psychological impact of living with permanent paralysis
  • Loss of enjoyment of life when paralysis ends the activities and relationships that defined who you were before the crash
  • Compensation for physical impairment and disfigurement, which carries no cap at all under Colorado law and often represents the largest single recovery category in a serious Adams County SCI case
  • Loss of consortium for a spouse or family members affected by the injury

Physical impairment damages are uncapped under Colorado law, with no threshold or mechanism required to reach that status. They are separate from the pain-and-suffering cap under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. In a serious Northglenn spinal cord injury case, the economic damages alone, driven by 40 to 60 years of real care costs projected forward, typically exceed the non-economic cap many times over. That is why the life care plan, not the pain-and-suffering calculation, is where the largest recovery is built. We work with certified life care planners, spinal cord neurologists, and forensic economists to produce a damages model that stands up to adversarial challenge from defense experts.

Fault, government entities, and the rules that govern recovery

What if you were partly at fault, or a government entity was involved in your Northglenn SCI?

Two Colorado rules decide the outcome of more Northglenn spinal cord injury claims than almost any other legal question: the modified comparative fault bar and the CGIA notice deadline. Both need to be addressed at the outset of every case, not after a deadline has closed.

Modified comparative fault: how insurers use it against Northglenn injury victims

  • Colorado follows modified comparative fault under C.R.S. 13-21-111. You can recover damages as long as your share of fault is less than 50 percent. At 50 percent or more at fault, recovery is zero.
  • Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. Found 25 percent at fault in a $4 million spinal cord case, you recover $3 million.
  • On I-25 and on the 104th and 120th Avenue corridors, where merge-conflict facts and intersection right-of-way disputes can be argued both ways, insurers press fault assignments hard. Every percentage point shifts the recovery number on a multi-million-dollar claim.
  • Crash reconstruction, camera footage from commercial properties along the corridors, and traffic engineering analysis of the specific intersection or merge point can challenge and correct inflated fault assignments.

CGIA: when a government entity contributed to the injury

  • The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) requires a written notice of claim within 182 days of discovering the injury when a government entity bears responsibility. That clock runs from the date of discovery of the injury, not the crash date. Missing it bars the government-entity claim entirely.
  • If a City of Northglenn vehicle, an Adams County fleet vehicle, or a CDOT truck was involved in the crash, or if a documented road defect on a government-maintained surface contributed, the CGIA notice requirement applies.
  • Under C.R.S. 24-10-114, a government entity's share of recovery is capped at $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 aggregate for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026. Those caps apply only to the government defendant. Private parties in the same case remain subject to uncapped economic damages and uncapped physical impairment recovery.
How it works

How a Northglenn spinal cord injury case moves from the crash to a result

Spinal cord injury cases in Adams County follow a defined path: free case evaluation, expert retention, life care planning, demand, negotiation, and, if an insurer refuses fair compensation, trial at the Adams County District Court in Brighton. Most cases settle. We prepare every case for the 17th Judicial District from day one.

  1. Free case evaluation

    We review how the injury happened, explain what Colorado law allows you to recover in an Adams County SCI case, and tell you honestly whether the facts support a claim. The consultation costs nothing and carries no obligation to hire us.

  2. Liability investigation and evidence preservation

    We gather the Adams County crash report, request surveillance and dashcam footage from the I-25 interchange area and the 104th and 120th Avenue corridors, interview witnesses, and identify every responsible party and insurance policy. When a government entity is involved, we serve the CGIA notice under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) before the 182-day window closes.

  3. Build the life care plan with certified experts

    We retain certified life care planners, spinal cord neurologists, and forensic economists to document 40 to 60 years of projected costs. The plan accounts for Medical CPI inflation, Colorado-specific cost factors including altitude-related complications and Denver metro home modification costs, and is built to withstand detailed defense challenge on every line item.

  4. Demand and negotiation

    We present a documented demand grounded in the life care plan and negotiate from trial readiness, not from a willingness to accept the first number. The demand reflects every category the law allows, including uncapped economic damages and uncapped physical impairment recovery, so the insurer understands what a 17th Judicial District jury would be asked to award.

  5. Litigation and trial in the 17th Judicial District

    When an insurer refuses fair compensation for a catastrophic Adams County injury, we file at the Adams County District Court, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601, and try the case before a 17th Judicial District jury. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. Our trial team is ready when a Northglenn jury is what full recovery requires.

Spinal cord injury cases are complex and routinely take one to three years or longer. The timeline depends on when the injured person reaches maximum medical improvement, how disputed the liability facts are, and whether the defense fights the life care plan projections. We give you an honest assessment at every stage, and you have direct access to a senior attorney throughout.

Your team

The team handling your Northglenn spinal cord injury 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 Northglenn spinal cord injury case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney working alongside the life care planners, spinal cord specialists, and forensic economists these cases require.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict Works with life care planners 17th Judicial District experience Bilingual EN / ES Free consultation No fee unless we win

CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Northglenn office. We serve Northglenn spinal cord injury clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We come to the hospital or to your home when the family needs that. We file Adams County cases at the Adams County District Court, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601, and we try cases in the 17th Judicial District. What you get is the work, the experts, and the result.

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Frequently asked questions

Northglenn spinal cord injury frequently asked questions

Where would my Northglenn spinal cord injury lawsuit be filed?

A Northglenn spinal cord injury case above the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed at the Adams County District Court, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601, in Colorado's 17th Judicial District. The 17th Judicial District covers Adams County and Broomfield County. CGH Injury Lawyers files and tries 17th Judicial District spinal cord injury cases directly from our Denver office, with no added cost to Northglenn clients.

How long do I have to file a spinal cord injury claim after a Northglenn crash?

The deadline depends on the type of claim. If a motor vehicle crash caused the injury, the filing deadline is three years under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). Most other spinal cord injury claims against private defendants carry a two-year filing deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If a government entity, such as a city or county vehicle or a road defect on a public surface, was involved, a written notice of claim must also be served within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1), or the government-entity claim is barred entirely. Do not wait. Evidence from the crash scene and commercial camera systems disappears quickly.

Does Colorado cap what I can recover in a Northglenn spinal cord injury case?

Economic damages such as medical bills, lost wages, attendant care, and future care costs are never capped in Colorado. 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. Compensation for physical impairment carries no cap at all under Colorado law, which means the largest Northglenn spinal cord injury recoveries are built on economic damages and the physical impairment category, not on the non-economic pain-and-suffering figure. If a government entity is involved, that entity's share 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. Those CGIA caps apply only to the government defendant, not to any private party in the same case.

Can I recover if I was partly at fault for the crash that caused my spinal cord injury?

Yes, as long as your share of fault is less than 50 percent. Colorado follows a modified comparative fault rule under C.R.S. 13-21-111. If a jury finds you 49 percent at fault, you can still recover, though your award is reduced by that 49 percent. At 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. On I-25 and along the 104th and 120th Avenue corridors, where merge conflicts and intersection disputes can be argued both ways, insurers frequently press fault assignments as high as possible to reduce a multi-million-dollar payout. Crash reconstruction, camera footage, and traffic engineering evidence can challenge those assignments.

Which hospital treats spinal cord injuries from Northglenn crashes?

North Suburban Medical Center is the closest acute-care hospital to Northglenn and handles a high volume of crash and trauma cases from the I-25 North corridor and the 104th and 120th Avenue commercial strips. SCL Health Good Samaritan Medical Center provides additional acute-care and surgical capacity for Adams County residents. For the most severe spinal cord injuries, patients are transferred to Level I trauma facilities in Denver or Aurora for specialized spinal surgery. Many Northglenn-area SCI patients then receive inpatient rehabilitation at Craig Hospital in Englewood, one of the country's leading spinal cord rehabilitation programs. Records from every treating facility are part of the damages documentation.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have an office in Northglenn?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers has one office, at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, (303) 209-9395. We serve Northglenn and all of Adams County from that office, file spinal cord injury cases at the Adams County District Court in Brighton, and come to you when the family needs that. There is no additional charge for Northglenn clients. We are available in English and Spanish.

It's More Than Money.

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

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Read next: Colorado spinal cord injury law: the statewide guide

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