Content reviewed by:
Alex Shulman
If you were hurt working inside a correctional facility in Peekskill, you may be dealing with pain, missed shifts, and uncertainty about your next steps. Shulman & Hill Injury Lawyers helps New York corrections officers pursue benefits and pursue accountability after on-the-job incidents across Westchester County.
We handle workers’ compensation, line-of-duty injuries, PTSD and mental trauma claims, repetitive stress injuries, and third-party negligence cases tied to jails and prisons. This guidance applies to claims arising in Peekskill and nearby courts and hearing locations.
If you need a corrections officer injury lawyer in Peekskill, we’re ready to help you protect your income and health. To learn more, talk to a Peekskill workers’ compensation lawyer today and schedule a free consultation.
Why Choose a Corrections Officer Injury Lawyer in Peekskill
A corrections environment is unique: inmate encounters, cell extractions, contraband searches, and nonstop standing create risks most jobs don’t. You benefit from counsel that knows the duties, policies, and reporting practices inside facilities serving Peekskill.
Our Peeksill personal injury lawyers work with COs, sergeants, and civilian staff assigned to county jails and state facilities. Our familiarity with facility logs, use-of-force reports, and injury reporting helps us present accurate timelines and overcome insurer pushback.
If a defective product or negligent contractor played a part, we can file a related civil action. That combined approach can increase your total compensation when comp alone falls short.
How Workers’ Compensation Protects New York Corrections Officers
New York workers’ compensation pays medical care and a portion of lost wages after a work-related injury or illness. You generally do not have to prove fault, which speeds access to treatment authorizations and wage benefits.
For many COs, the first dispute isn’t about liability but about the nature and extent of disability. We prepare medical evidence and job-duty descriptions to connect your diagnosis to your work, minimize delays, and target the right benefit rate.
Common Injuries in Correctional Facilities
Injuries in corrections often stem from inmate altercations, lifting and restraining, slips and falls, and exposure to hazards. We frequently see shoulder tears, back strains, knee injuries, and hand and wrist damage from repetitive motion and control techniques.
Officers also face head trauma, hearing loss from alarms, and occupational illnesses from biohazards or chemical agents. Psychological injuries, including PTSD and anxiety disorders, can follow assaults, riots, or cumulative exposure to traumatic events.
Eligibility and Filing Deadlines Under New York Law
In New York, you must report a work injury to your employer as soon as possible, and no later than 30 days for most injuries. You also generally must file an Employee Claim (Form C-3) with the Workers’ Compensation Board within two years of the accident or diagnosis.
Missing a deadline can damage your case. We help you meet notice requirements, preserve witness statements, and coordinate timely filings so you can focus on treatment while your claim moves forward.
Benefits Available After a Line-of-Duty Injury
Workers’ comp can cover all reasonable and necessary medical care, from hospital visits to PT, imaging, and surgery. You may also receive cash benefits for lost wages if you’re partially or totally disabled for more than seven days.
If your injury leaves permanent loss of use to a limb or a schedule-loss-eligible body part, you may qualify for additional awards. When your disability is not on the schedule, we build a case for non-schedule permanent partial disability based on medical evidence and work capacity.
Disputed Claims, IMEs, and Appeals: What To Expect
Insurers may dispute whether your injury is work-related, your disability level, or your need for surgery. We address these disputes with updated medicals, job-duty narratives, and hearing testimony from you and, when useful, coworkers.
If your claim is denied, we file for a hearing and present evidence to the Workers’ Compensation Board. When a legal error or unfavorable ruling occurs, we handle applications for Board review and, if appropriate, appeals to higher courts.
Third-Party Liability Beyond Workers’ Comp
Sometimes someone outside your employer contributes to your injury—defective restraint gear, unsafe contracted maintenance, or negligent medical providers. In those situations, you can pursue a third-party claim while also receiving workers’ compensation.
A third-party case can seek pain and suffering, full wage loss, and other damages that workers’ compensation will not pay. We coordinate both matters to avoid benefit offsets that reduce your overall recovery.
Examples of Third-Party Claims
- Faulty door hardware or locking mechanisms that cause crush or fall injuries
- Defective boots, belts, or protective equipment that fail under normal use
- Negligent contractor cleaning or maintenance leading to slip hazards
- Malfunctioning transport vehicles owned by outside vendors
- Assaults enabled by negligent security from non-employer entities
What To Do After an On-the-Job Incident
Your actions in the first hours and days can influence your claim value and recovery timeline. If safe, document the scene, ask a coworker to take photos, and preserve your uniform or equipment if defective gear might be involved.
Use this quick checklist to protect your claim:
- Report the incident to your supervisor and request that it be logged.
- Seek prompt medical attention and describe all symptoms and exposures.
- Identify witnesses and save their contact information.
- File Form C-3 with the Workers’ Compensation Board.
- Keep copies of use-of-force reports and unusual incident reports.
- Follow medical restrictions and avoid duties your doctor has not cleared.
How Shulman & Hill Builds and Presents Your Claim
We gather facility records, timecards, camera footage when available, and incident reports to verify the mechanism of injury. Then we work with your treating doctors to obtain clear opinions linking your condition to job duties and to your disability level.
When insurers schedule Independent Medical Examinations (IMEs), we prepare you for what to expect and review the report for errors. Our goal is to position your case for approval or, if necessary, a strong hearing before a law judge.
Our Fee Structure and How Contingency Works
Workers’ compensation attorney fees in New York are subject to Board approval and are typically deducted from awards, not paid upfront. That means you can get legal help without out-of-pocket retainers.
For third-party cases, we use contingency fees approved by the court, so we only get paid if we recover for you. We explain all costs in writing before you sign, so you know exactly how fees and expenses work.
Get Help From Shulman & Hill
If you were hurt in a facility serving Peekskill, you don’t have to guess at deadlines or forms. We help corrections officers pursue New York workers’ comp and, when appropriate, third-party claims.
Reach out to Shulman & Hill for a no-cost case review with a Peekskill corrections officer injury lawyer. We’ll discuss your injury, your benefits, and the next steps to protect your pay and your health.