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General information about Nevada personal injury claims and how we work. For advice about your specific situation, call us. It's free.
Nevada generally gives you two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit, but important exceptions can shorten that window. Claims against government entities, for example, have much earlier notice deadlines, and other situations can change the timeline as well. Because deadlines vary and missing one can end a claim, it's best to speak with an attorney as soon as possible. This is general information about Nevada law, not legal advice about your specific situation.
If you're hurt, get medical attention first — both for your health and because prompt care documents your injuries. If you're able, keep records: photos of the scene and any injuries, the other party's information, names of witnesses, and any incident or police reports. Be careful about giving a recorded statement to an insurer before you've spoken with an attorney, and avoid posting about the incident on social media. Keeping evidence and seeking advice early can make a meaningful difference.
Yes. Injuries on casino floors, at resorts and hotels, and claims involving negligent security or unsafe premises are a particular focus of the firm. Reggie served as in-house counsel for a major Las Vegas resort operator, so he understands how these properties and their insurers handle a claim, and he uses that for injured guests.
Yes. The firm keeps a deliberately selective caseload so that clients work directly with Reggie rather than being passed to a rotating group of case managers or screeners. When you call, you reach the attorney handling your case.
Reggie spent years on the defense side, handling insurance defense and serving as in-house counsel for MGM Resorts. He understands how insurers and big venues decide what a claim is worth and how they fight it, and he puts that to work for injured clients. To be clear, this is general professional experience and judgment, not confidential information from any former client.
It's common for an insurer to make an early offer before the full extent of an injury is known. Once you accept an offer and sign a release, you generally cannot reopen the claim later, even if you end up needing more treatment. Before you respond, it's worth having someone review the offer and your situation so you know what the claim might actually be worth. We're glad to talk it through at no cost. This is general information, not legal advice about your specific claim.
You may still be able to recover even if you were partly at fault. Nevada follows a modified comparative-negligence rule: generally, an injured person can recover as long as they are not more at fault than the other party or parties combined, and any recovery is reduced by their own percentage of fault. Fault is often disputed and how it is evaluated matters, so it’s worth discussing your situation with an attorney. This is general information about Nevada law, not legal advice about your case.
Injuries at casinos, hotels, resorts, bars, nightclubs, apartment complexes, parking structures, and other properties can raise premises-liability or negligent-security questions about whether the property kept its guests reasonably safe. These claims often turn on evidence that disappears fast: surveillance video, incident reports, maintenance and cleaning logs, security records, prior complaints, and witness information. The sooner someone starts, the more of it survives. Because Reggie worked in-house for a major Las Vegas resort operator, he knows where that evidence lives and how to go after it.
We handle personal injury cases on a contingency-fee basis, which means there's no fee to get started and no attorney's fee unless there is a recovery. Clients may remain responsible for case costs and litigation expenses. The specific fee and how case costs are handled are set out in a written fee agreement before we begin.
We represent injured people throughout Las Vegas and Clark County, including Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Summerlin. After-hours intake is available, and we can arrange to meet where it works for you.
This page is general information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Nevada law changes and every case is different.
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