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US-36 corridor through Superior, Colorado. CGH Injury Lawyers represents spinal cord injury victims serving Superior and Boulder County from our Denver office.
Superior, Colorado

Superior Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer: Building Your Case to Cover What a Lifetime of Care Actually Costs

When a crash on US-36 or McCaslin Boulevard leaves you or someone you love with a spinal cord injury, the gap between the insurer's first offer and the real projected cost of permanent paralysis is often measured in millions. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Superior and all of Boulder County from our Denver office, uses certified life care planners and spinal cord specialists to build every claim, and files at the Boulder County District Court when an insurer refuses to be fair. There is no fee unless we recover for you.

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  • Three legal deadlines apply to most Superior SCI cases. A crash involving a motor vehicle on US-36 or McCaslin Boulevard triggers a three-year statute of limitations under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). Non-vehicle causes such as falls or construction site injuries run two years under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If any government body, CDOT, the City of Superior, or Boulder County, contributed to the crash through a vehicle or maintained road defect, a separate written notice must be served within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1), or the right to sue that entity is permanently lost.
  • All Superior spinal cord injury lawsuits that exceed the county court jurisdictional threshold are filed at the Boulder County District Court, 1777 Sixth St., Boulder, CO 80302 (20th Judicial District). Superior falls entirely within Boulder County. CGH Injury Lawyers does not maintain a Superior office; we manage Boulder County cases from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, and come to you when the family needs a home or hospital visit.
  • Colorado's modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111) lets you recover only if your share of fault is below 50 percent. Your damages award is reduced by whatever percentage of fault a jury assigns to you. On high-speed corridors like US-36, where merge-point geometry and rear-end dynamics fuel post-crash blame disputes, this rule becomes the primary tool insurers use to cut or eliminate a multi-million-dollar spinal cord injury payout.

The US-36 corridor through Superior is one of the most congested stretches on the Colorado Front Range, carrying daily commuter volumes between the Denver metro and Boulder County at speeds that make rear-end and merge-zone crashes especially dangerous. When those crashes happen at highway speed, the resulting spinal cord injuries often fall at the highest categories of severity. The National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center's 2025 data sheet estimates that a complete cervical injury at age 25 carries a projected lifetime care cost of more than $6.2 million, in 2024 dollars. Paraplegia estimates sit at approximately $3 million over the same horizon. A first insurance offer almost never starts at those numbers. CGH Injury Lawyers builds Superior SCI claims from expert life care plans that account for decades of Boulder County medical, housing, and equipment costs, files at the 20th Judicial District when necessary, and charges nothing unless we recover for you.

Medical classification and claim value

The ASIA scale, injury level, and why they determine what your Superior SCI claim is worth

Before any number appears in a demand letter or a court filing, two medical facts must be established: the neurological level of the injury and whether it is complete or incomplete on the ASIA Impairment Scale. Insurers know these facts before they make the first offer. Every number in a settlement or trial is built on them. So is every dollar in a defensible life care plan.

  1. Cervical cord injuries (C1 through C8): the highest projected costs in any SCI case

    Injuries to the cervical cord affect sensation and movement in all four limbs and produce the most resource-intensive care profiles of any SCI category. High cervical injuries at C1 through C4 often require permanent attendant care and, in the most severe presentations, mechanical ventilation. The National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center's 2025 data sheet projects that a high cervical SCI at age 25 costs more than $6.2 million over a lifetime, in 2024 dollars. Low tetraplegia at C5 through C8 projects to approximately $4.5 million. Both figures assume national average costs. Superior sits in Boulder County, where accessible housing modifications in a competitive real estate market, winter-rated power wheelchair storage, and longer emergency transport distances from a crash scene on US-36 to Foothills Hospital in Boulder drive costs above those baselines. The life care plan in a Superior cervical SCI case must account for these local cost pressures to accurately reflect what the claim is worth.

  2. Thoracic cord injuries (T1 through T12): paraplegia with preserved upper-body function

    A thoracic injury destroys motor and sensory function below the chest while leaving the arms and hands fully functional. Most people with thoracic-level paraplegia use a manual or power wheelchair and are capable of independent living given adequate home modification. The National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center's 2025 data sheet places the lifetime care projection for a person with paraplegia injured at age 25 at approximately $3 million in 2024 dollars, with recurring annual care costs in the range of $55,900 to $73,000 after the first year. In Rock Creek and other Superior neighborhoods where the housing stock was heavily damaged or rebuilt following the December 2021 Marshall Fire, accessible entry modifications depend entirely on the specific rebuilt structure. Those costs must be individually assessed and documented in the life care plan, not estimated from a national average.

  3. Lumbar and sacral cord injuries (L1 through S5): preserved partial function with lifelong care demands

    Injuries at the lumbar and sacral levels often preserve some leg movement and allow ambulation with bracing. Bowel and bladder dysfunction, however, is a near-universal consequence and requires a structured management program, including supplies, medication, and periodic surgical procedures that continue across a full lifetime. Defense counsel and insurers frequently treat the visible mobility of a lumbar SCI victim as a signal that the injury is less serious than claimed. A life care plan that documents the ongoing cost of managing bowel and bladder dysfunction, secondary complications, and reduced functional capacity over 30 or 40 years is the primary rebuttal to that argument. These cases can still involve millions of dollars of projected expense.

  4. Complete vs. incomplete injuries: the ASIA grade that controls the number

    The American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale runs from ASIA A through ASIA E. An ASIA A grade describes a complete injury: no motor or sensory function is preserved below the neurological level. ASIA B through D are incomplete injuries, in which some neural pathways remain intact and produce partial sensation or limited voluntary movement. The challenge in incomplete SCI cases is timing. The full trajectory of recovery from an ASIA B or C injury is typically unknown for 12 to 18 months post-injury. Insurers exploit that uncertainty by presenting offers early, when the prognosis looks optimistic, before the injured person's functional plateau becomes clear. A claim settled at four months based on a partially optimistic ASIA C prognosis can be millions short when rehabilitation ends 14 months later and independence has not been achieved. We wait for maximum medical improvement and document the actual functional outcome before advising on any settlement.

Where your case lives

The courthouse, the trauma system, and the roads that shape every Superior SCI claim

Superior's position on the US-36 commuter corridor, its location within Boulder County, and the absence of an acute-care hospital within city limits each affect how a spinal cord injury case is documented, filed, and tried. These are the ground-level facts that drive the strategy for every case we handle here.

Courthouse

Boulder County District Court, 20th Judicial District, 1777 Sixth St., Boulder

Every Superior spinal cord injury lawsuit that exceeds the county court's monetary limit is filed at the Boulder County District Court, 1777 Sixth St., Boulder, CO 80302, which seats juries drawn from throughout the 20th Judicial District. Because Superior sits entirely within Boulder County, every serious personal injury or wrongful death claim here lands in this court. Boulder County jurors who commute on US-36 and know McCaslin Boulevard understand the physical environment where the crash occurred. That familiarity can matter at trial. CGH Injury Lawyers handles 20th Judicial District filings and trials directly from our Denver office. Superior clients pay nothing extra for the Boulder County venue.

Trauma Care and Rehabilitation

Foothills Hospital (8 miles), Longmont United Hospital (14 miles), Craig Hospital (Englewood)

Superior has no acute-care hospital within city limits. The nearest full-service facility for a victim of a US-36 crash is Foothills Hospital in Boulder, approximately eight miles from central Superior. Longmont United Hospital, approximately 14 miles away, provides additional care for Boulder County residents who require it. Spinal cord injuries at the most severe ASIA grades typically require transfer from these facilities to a Level I trauma center in Denver or Aurora for specialized neurosurgical care, followed by weeks or months of inpatient rehabilitation. Craig Hospital in Englewood, one of the country's leading spinal cord and brain injury rehabilitation programs, is a common destination for Superior SCI patients at that stage. The cumulative records generated at every point in that chain, from the roadside stabilization through months of rehabilitation, form the factual spine of the damages claim. We pull and coordinate records from every treating facility from the moment we take the case.

High-Risk Corridors

US-36, McCaslin Boulevard, and Rock Creek Road

US Highway 36 is Superior's primary commuter artery and the road most associated with catastrophic crashes in this community. The highway carries high-speed, high-volume traffic between Denver and Boulder, and the merge geometry near the McCaslin Boulevard interchange produces the kind of abrupt-deceleration, lane-change collisions that generate the highest-severity outcomes. A rear-end crash at US-36 highway speeds creates enough force to produce cervical or thoracic SCI in any occupant. McCaslin Boulevard runs north-south through Superior as the principal arterial connecting Rock Creek residential neighborhoods to US-36 and to Louisville beyond. McCaslin sees a mix of commuters, school traffic, cyclists, and pedestrians, particularly near Rock Creek Community Park. Active construction zones tied to post-Marshall Fire rebuilding efforts in the Rock Creek and Marshall Road areas have added lane shifts and temporary hazard patterns along both McCaslin and Rock Creek Road, changing the crash profile of corridors that already carried significant risk. Each of these roads has a history, a geometry, and a set of responsible parties that must be researched before liability can be assigned. When a government road authority is one of those parties, the 182-day CGIA notice clock under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) begins running from the date of discovering the injury, which is often the crash date but is not always.

Compensation under Colorado law

What a Superior spinal cord injury case can recover: economic damages, non-economic caps, and physical impairment

Colorado draws a clear line between economic and non-economic damages in SCI cases. Economic losses carry no cap; the statute expressly allows recovery of the full documented financial impact, which in a severe spinal cord injury case can span 40 to 60 years. Non-economic losses are capped, but physical impairment is treated separately and is also uncapped. Understanding which category your losses fall into determines the strategy for the largest possible recovery.

Economic damages: no cap, no limit on documented lifetime costs

  • Attendant care costs, which the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center's 2025 data sheet estimates at $55,900 to $244,879 per year depending on injury level, in 2024 dollars, with Boulder County healthcare labor rates pushing costs to the higher end of that range
  • Power wheelchair purchase and replacement on a roughly five-year cycle, including winter-rated storage and cold-climate performance modifications for a Colorado environment
  • Accessible home modification costs assessed individually to the client's actual Boulder County property, reflecting local construction market rates rather than national averages
  • Medical supplies, catheters, pressure-management equipment, bowel management supplies, and the periodic surgical procedures required across a full lifetime
  • Lost income, lost career trajectory, and the full economic value of reduced lifetime earning capacity
  • Future medical cost inflation projected using the Medical Consumer Price Index, which historically rises 3 to 4 percent per year and compounds significantly over a 40-year horizon

Non-economic damages and physical impairment

  • Pain and suffering, capped at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5)
  • Emotional distress from the permanent life disruption of paralysis, including grief, depression, and psychological harm documented by treating providers
  • Loss of enjoyment of life, which for an active Boulder County resident includes activities foreclosed by spinal cord injury: hiking, cycling, trail use at Rock Creek Community Park, and any professional or recreational pursuit the injury eliminates
  • Physical impairment and disfigurement, which are entirely uncapped under Colorado law and treated as a separate category from non-economic damages
  • Wrongful death damages under C.R.S. 13-21-203(1)(a), capped at $2,125,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, when a spinal cord injury is ultimately fatal
  • Loss of consortium for a spouse or close family member when the injury substantially impairs the relationship

The non-economic cap at $1.5 million (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5) means that pain and suffering is not where the largest recoveries are built in Colorado SCI cases. Economic damages and the uncapped physical impairment category together are where serious paralysis claims develop multi-million-dollar value. A certified life care planner working alongside a spinal cord neurologist and a forensic economist is the team that builds those numbers in a form that withstands defense challenge at trial or at the negotiating table. We assemble that team at the start of every Superior SCI case.

Protecting your claim

Six things that protect a Superior spinal cord injury claim in the weeks after the crash

The earliest weeks after a spinal cord injury are when the most consequential decisions happen and when the fewest people in the family have legal guidance. These six steps address the practical and legal actions that shape what the case can ultimately recover.

  1. Stay in the treatment program and keep every record

    After a Superior crash, trauma care typically begins at Foothills Hospital in Boulder, approximately eight miles away, or at Longmont United Hospital, approximately 14 miles from central Superior. Severe SCI patients transfer from there to Level I facilities in Denver or Aurora. Inpatient rehabilitation, often at Craig Hospital in Englewood, follows. Every physician assessment, therapy note, and imaging study during that path is evidence of the injury's neurological grade and the trajectory of recovery. Gaps in treatment give defense counsel a narrative that function improved enough to stop care. Every appointment skipped weakens the damages model.

  2. Reject early settlement offers until maximum medical improvement

    Early settlement offers from an insurer are priced at a fraction of what a lifetime care plan actually requires. A $1.5 million offer in the first 90 days of a high cervical injury case, where the NSCISC 2025 data projects more than $6.2 million in lifetime care, is an insurer banking on the family's urgency and the injury's uncertain prognosis. Once a settlement is signed, it cannot be reopened. The standard is maximum medical improvement, which typically arrives 12 to 24 months post-injury. Nothing should be finalized before that point without explicit advice of counsel who has reviewed the full life care plan.

  3. Serve the CGIA notice before 182 days expire

    A written notice of claim is required under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) within 182 days of discovering the injury if any government entity, CDOT, the City of Superior, or Boulder County, bears responsibility through a vehicle or a maintained road defect. The 182-day clock runs from the date of discovering the injury, not always the crash date. Missing this deadline forfeits the right to sue the government entity entirely, even when that entity bears the largest share of fault. On US-36, where CDOT has jurisdiction over the roadway and federal transportation programs may also be involved, identifying government-entity exposure early is part of our first-week case intake process.

  4. Move immediately to preserve crash-scene evidence

    Camera footage from the US-36 and McCaslin Boulevard corridor is typically retained for 24 to 72 hours before automatic overwrite. Event data recorders in vehicles involved in the crash store pre-impact speeds and braking profiles, but access requires prompt legal action. The Boulder County Sheriff and Superior Police generate crash reports that document road conditions, signal timing, and witness statements at the time of the collision. Physical evidence at the scene, including skid marks, debris fields, and construction-zone configurations, changes rapidly. We move to preserve all of this at the start of every case because evidence available in week one may be permanently gone in week two.

  5. Decline recorded statements to the at-fault insurer

    Claims adjusters use recorded statements as a tool to attribute fault to the injured person. Colorado's modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111) reduces your award by your assigned fault percentage and eliminates it entirely at 50 percent. On US-36, where right-of-way disputes after a high-speed crash are routine, a single ambiguous answer in a recorded statement can shift fault percentages in ways that remove millions of dollars from an otherwise strong SCI recovery. Speak with an attorney before any recorded statement and before signing any document from an insurer.

  6. Start the legal process well before the filing deadline

    Motor vehicle crash SCI cases carry a three-year filing deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). Non-vehicle SCI cases run two years under C.R.S. 13-80-102. Building a complete life care plan, retaining a spinal cord neurologist, engaging a forensic economist, and completing all pre-filing investigation typically requires six to twelve months of active work before any claim is ready to file. The filing deadline is the outside boundary. Starting the process early is what allows the case to be built correctly, not rushed.

Fault allocation and government liability

Shared fault on US-36 and government involvement on McCaslin: the two issues that change recovery amounts most

In Superior SCI cases, two legal issues recur more frequently than any others. The first is how comparative fault affects the damages award when the defense argues the injured person contributed to the crash. The second is whether a government entity's involvement triggers CGIA notice obligations and recovery limits. Both must be addressed early and correctly.

Comparative fault: how insurers use C.R.S. 13-21-111 to reduce SCI payouts

  • Colorado follows a modified comparative fault standard under C.R.S. 13-21-111. The rule permits recovery as long as the injured person's share of fault is less than 50 percent. At 50 percent or above, the right to any recovery is eliminated entirely.
  • The damages award is reduced proportionally by the assigned fault percentage. A $4 million spinal cord injury award reduced by 25 percent fault attribution yields $3 million in actual recovery. In cases with lifetime care projections in the millions, even a 10 percent fault shift costs hundreds of thousands of dollars.
  • On US-36, where crash scenarios at the McCaslin Boulevard interchange often involve speed differentials, lane-change disputes, and merge-zone right-of-way questions, fault percentages are genuinely contested and depend on crash reconstruction, event data recorder analysis, and camera footage. Each of these evidence types must be secured quickly after the crash.

CGIA notice and recovery caps when a government entity is involved

  • The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act at C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) requires a written notice of claim to be served on any government entity bearing responsibility for the injury within 182 days of discovering the injury. Failing to serve that notice by the deadline destroys the claim against that entity regardless of how clear its liability is.
  • Government entity involvement in a Superior SCI case is most common through CDOT vehicles or road maintenance failures on US-36, Boulder County fleet vehicles, or municipal equipment. The CGIA notice must be served correctly and on time for each responsible government entity separately.
  • Under C.R.S. 24-10-114, recovery from any single government defendant is capped at $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 aggregate for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026. These limits apply only to the government defendant. Private parties in the same case are not subject to those caps, and a case often involves both government and non-government defendants in the same crash.
The case process

How a Superior SCI case moves from the crash to a recovery: five stages

The path from a catastrophic spinal cord injury in Superior to a full financial recovery runs through five defined stages. Each stage has a purpose, a timeline, and a set of expert voices. Most Boulder County SCI cases settle before trial. Every case we take is prepared as though trial is the endpoint.

  1. Stage 1: Free case evaluation and intake

    We review the facts of the crash and the injury, explain what Colorado law allows and what the realistic range of recovery looks like, and answer every question without cost or obligation. If the facts support a case, we take it and move immediately. We tell you honestly if they do not.

  2. Stage 2: Liability investigation and CGIA compliance

    We obtain the Superior Police or Boulder County Sheriff crash report, move to preserve camera and event data recorder evidence from the US-36 and McCaslin Boulevard corridors, identify every at-fault party and every applicable insurance policy, and serve CGIA notice under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) within the 182-day window whenever government-entity involvement is possible. No evidence opportunity is allowed to lapse.

  3. Stage 3: Life care planning with certified experts

    We commission a certified life care plan from planners working alongside the treating spinal cord neurologist and a forensic economist. The plan documents projected medical and non-medical costs across 40 to 60 years, incorporates Medical Consumer Price Index inflation at 3 to 4 percent annually, and addresses Boulder County-specific factors: accessible housing costs in a post-Marshall Fire construction environment, winter equipment storage, and the local labor rates for attendant care in the Front Range market. This plan is the damages model that every number in the case flows from.

  4. Stage 4: Demand and negotiation

    We present a demand grounded in the life care plan and negotiate from a position of complete trial preparation. We do not offer discounts on documented damages to close a case faster. Every insurer argument against the plan is answered with expert backup. Settlement happens when the recovery is fair, not when it is convenient.

  5. Stage 5: Trial at the Boulder County District Court, if necessary

    When an insurer refuses to offer a recovery that reflects the full documented lifetime cost, we file at the Boulder County District Court, 1777 Sixth St., Boulder, CO 80302, and take the case before a 20th Judicial District jury. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney holds ABOTA membership and has tried more than 25 cases to verdict. The credibility of a trial threat is what moves insurers at the negotiating table; the willingness to actually try the case is what delivers full recovery when they refuse to move.

Your legal team

The attorneys and experts behind every Superior SCI case at CGH Injury Lawyers

CGH Injury Lawyers is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly known as Cheney Galluzzi and Howard. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is an ABOTA member who has tried more than 25 cases to verdict. Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized in Best Lawyers in America every year since 2023. Each Superior spinal cord injury case is assigned to a licensed Colorado attorney who works directly with the life care planners, spinal cord neurologists, and economists the case requires from the first call to the final resolution.

ABOTA member on the team Timothy Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 25-plus cases tried to verdict Certified life care planner network 20th Judicial District litigation En espanol tambien Free first consultation No recovery, no fee

CGH Injury Lawyers does not maintain a Superior office. We serve Boulder County spinal cord injury clients from our office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We travel to the hospital, the rehabilitation facility, or your home when a family needs face-to-face counsel during recovery. All filings go to the Boulder County District Court. All trial preparation is done for the 20th Judicial District. The absence of a local Superior office changes only the commute; it does not change the quality of the representation or the cost to you.

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Frequently asked questions

Superior spinal cord injury: common questions answered

What is the statute of limitations for a spinal cord injury case in Superior, Colorado?

Three separate deadlines can apply. A spinal cord injury caused by a motor vehicle crash on US-36 or McCaslin Boulevard is governed by the three-year statute of limitations at C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n). A spinal cord injury caused by a fall, a construction site condition, or another non-vehicle event is governed by the two-year statute at C.R.S. 13-80-102. If a government entity such as CDOT, Boulder County, or the City of Superior contributed to the crash through a vehicle or a road maintenance failure, a written notice of claim must be served within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1), or the claim against that government entity is permanently barred. These deadlines run concurrently, not sequentially, and all must be tracked from day one.

Where is a Superior spinal cord injury lawsuit filed in Colorado?

All Superior personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits above the county-court monetary limit are filed at the Boulder County District Court, 1777 Sixth St., Boulder, CO 80302, in Colorado's 20th Judicial District. Superior is entirely within Boulder County, so every serious Superior SCI case lands in that court. Jurors are drawn from throughout Boulder County, which includes the US-36 commuter population that is familiar with the roadways where most Superior SCI crashes occur. CGH Injury Lawyers files and tries 20th Judicial District cases from our Denver office with no added cost to Superior clients.

Are damages capped in a Colorado spinal cord injury case?

Economic damages, including all documented medical costs, attendant care, lost income, and equipment, are not capped under Colorado law. Non-economic damages, primarily pain and suffering, are capped at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Compensation for physical impairment and disfigurement is also uncapped. Because the cap applies only to the non-economic category, and because economic damages in a serious SCI case routinely reach several million dollars, the cap typically does not set the ceiling for total recovery in a well-built case. If a government entity is involved, its share is separately capped at $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 aggregate for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026, under C.R.S. 24-10-114. Private defendants in the same case are not subject to those limits.

What if the injured person was partly at fault for the crash on US-36?

Colorado's modified comparative fault rule at C.R.S. 13-21-111 allows a partially at-fault injured person to recover as long as their share of fault is below 50 percent. The damages award is reduced by the assigned fault percentage. Being 25 percent at fault in a $4 million case yields $3 million in recovery. Being 50 percent or more at fault results in zero recovery. On US-36 through Superior, where merge-point geometry, deceleration rates, and lane-change disputes are the most common post-crash fault contentions, even a small shift in fault allocation can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Crash reconstruction, event data recorder evidence, and camera footage from the corridor are the tools used to challenge inflated fault assignments.

Which hospitals treat Superior spinal cord injury victims?

Superior does not have its own acute-care hospital. Victims of crashes on the US-36 and McCaslin Boulevard corridors are most frequently taken to Foothills Hospital in Boulder, approximately eight miles away, or Longmont United Hospital, approximately 14 miles from central Superior. Severe SCI cases require transfer to a Level I trauma center in Denver or Aurora for specialized neurosurgical care. Many Superior patients then enter inpatient spinal cord rehabilitation at Craig Hospital in Englewood. Records from every facility in this chain, from emergency transport through months of rehabilitation, document the injury's neurological grade and the course of treatment. All of that documentation is the foundation of a complete damages claim.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have a Superior office?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers has one office: 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, reachable at (303) 209-9395. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Superior office and does not represent otherwise. We serve Boulder County and Superior spinal cord injury clients from Denver, travel to the hospital or rehabilitation facility when family meetings require it, and file all Superior lawsuits at the Boulder County District Court in Boulder. Services are available in both English and Spanish. There is no additional fee for Superior clients.

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A lifetime of care is at stake. Let's build the case that covers it.

Free consultation. No fee unless we recover for you. Serving Superior and all of Boulder County from our Denver office. Available in English and Spanish.

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

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