New York umbilical cord birth injury claims generally must be filed before the child's 10th birthday under CPLR §214-a and CPLR §208. Every settlement requires judicial approval at an infant compromise hearing under CPLR §1207 and §1208, and attorney fees follow the sliding scale in Judiciary Law §474-a. According to a 2021 peer-reviewed review in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology (Leung et al.), umbilical cord prolapse is an unpredictable obstetric emergency with reported incidence of 1 to 6 per 1,000 pregnancies, associated with perinatal mortality of approximately 6% to 10% in high-income countries and per the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Green-top Guideline No. 50 (November 2014), a category 1 cesarean section should achieve birth within 30 minutes when cord prolapse is associated with a suspicious or pathological fetal heart rate pattern. Porter Law Group represents New York families whose newborns suffered preventable injuries from cord-related complications during pregnancy, labor, or delivery.
Settlement
Jury Verdict
Settlement
Settlement
Cord-related birth injury cases turn on the timing question when did the cord compression event begin, when should the obstetric team have recognized it, and when should they have delivered the baby. The fetal heart tracing is a continuous record. When that record shows a Category III pattern, sustained bradycardia after rupture of membranes, or recurrent variable decelerations consistent with cord compression and the chart shows the team did not act in time — the case is generally strong. Porter Law Group has recovered more than $500 million for seriously injured clients since 2009, including multiple pediatric recoveries exceeding $8 million for children whose injuries were caused by preventable birth-related events.
Led by Harvard-educated attorney Michael S. Porter, a former U.S. Army JAG Corps Captain with over 20 years of trial experience, the firm retains maternal-fetal medicine specialists, neonatologists, pediatric neurologists, neuroradiologists, placental pathologists, and life care planners to document the precise mechanism and timing of injury. Seven of eight partner-level attorneys are recognized by Super Lawyers, a distinction earned by fewer than 5% of New York attorneys.
"Cord cases come down to the bradycardia-to-delivery interval. Peer-reviewed obstetric literature now reports that fetal cord blood pH declines during sustained bradycardia from cord compression at a rate estimated at approximately 0.009 per minute, with a wide 95% confidence interval reflecting clinical variability — but the underlying principle is clear: every minute of sustained bradycardia produces measurable additional acidosis. That means every minute matters. We work with maternal-fetal medicine experts who can reconstruct the FHR strip minute-by-minute and identify exactly when the team should have called the cesarean — and when the baby's brain was being injured because they didn't."
— Michael S. Porter, J.D., Porter Law Group

REQUEST A NO-OBLIGATION CASE REVIEW
Umbilical cord birth injuries are injuries caused by mechanical or vascular compromise of the umbilical cord that interrupts fetal oxygen delivery. The cord is the sole channel by which the fetus receives oxygenated blood and removes carbon dioxide; sustained or severe interruption produces fetal hypoxia, acidosis, and if not corrected promptly permanent brain injury or fetal death. Per the 2021 Am J Obstet Gynecol peer-reviewed review by Leung et al., perinatal mortality from cord prolapse alone ranges from 6% to 10% in high-income countries and 23% to 27% in low-income countries — figures consistent with the 91 per 1,000 perinatal mortality cited in a 2024 PMC peer-reviewed obstetric anesthesia review and with the2015 Hasegawa et al. peer-reviewed Japanese cohort reporting intrauterine death in 3.4% and neonatal death in 5.6% of 267 UCP cases out of 2,037,460 total deliveries.
The recognized cord-related complications fall into four categories:
| Complication | Mechanism | Approximate Incidence | Primary Source |
| Umbilical cord prolapse | Cord descends through cervix before fetal presenting part; immediate compression | 1 to 6 per 1,000 pregnancies | 2021 Am J Obstet Gynecol review |
| Cord compression (without prolapse) | Recurrent or sustained pressure on cord during labor | Variable; commonly seen as variable FHR decelerations | NIH StatPearls (2023) |
| Nuchal cord (cord around neck) | Cord wrapped one or more loops around fetal neck | 6% at 20 weeks GA; 29% at 42 weeks GA; ≥2 loops in 2.4–8.3% of pregnancies | Larson et al., cited in PMC peer-reviewed nuchal cord review |
| True knot of cord (TKUC) | Actual knot in cord vasculature; tightens during labor | 0.3% to 2.1% of pregnancies | 2025 peer-reviewed cohort study, Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics |
The clinical urgency varies by complication. Umbilical cord prolapse is an immediate obstetric emergency requiring emergency cesarean within 30 minutes (per RCOG guideline). Most nuchal cords are clinically incidental and do not require cesarean. True knots are usually diagnosed only after delivery but can cause sudden fetal death when they tighten — and a 2025 peer-reviewed cohort study reported that true knot of the cord is a strong predictor of perinatal death (adjusted odds ratio 15.46, 95% CI 9.30–25.70).
Cord-related events are the mechanism; the resulting injury is most often hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), which can lead to cerebral palsy, brain damage, seizure disorders, and developmental disabilities. For the broader mechanism of fetal oxygen compromise across antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum periods, see our Oxygen Deprivation practice page.
Umbilical cord prolapse (UCP) occurs when the umbilical cord exits the cervical opening before the fetal presenting part. Per NIH StatPearls (2023), UCP is a rare obstetric emergency that carries a high rate of potential fetal morbidity and mortality, with cord compression by the descending fetus causing immediate fetal hypoxia and bradycardia.
The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Green-top Guideline No. 50 (November 2014) recognizes three types:
The recognized risk factors include fetal malpresentation (especially breech), polyhydramnios, multiple gestation, prematurity, low birth weight, high fetal station with rupture of membranes, and certain obstetric procedures including amniotomy, fetal blood sampling, and cervical ripening balloon insertion. Per a 2018 peer-reviewed review in International Journal of Women's Health, iatrogenic UCP caused by these obstetric interventions accounts for up to 50% of cases.
The standard of care for UCP is:
The 2021 AJOG review by Leung et al. reports that during sustained fetal bradycardia from cord compression, cord arterial pH declines significantly with the bradycardia-to-delivery interval, at a point-estimate rate of approximately 0.009 per minute (95% CI, 0.0003–0.0180; note the wide confidence interval reflects substantial clinical variability) a finding that quantifies the urgency of expedited delivery while acknowledging that the precise rate of decline varies between cases. Critically, the same review notes that pH does not correlate with intermittent decelerations, suggesting that intermittent cord compression is reversible while sustained bradycardia indicates progressive injury.
Cord prolapse and other cord complications are not by themselves malpractice. ACOG, RCOG, and consistent peer-reviewed literature classify cord prolapse as an "unpredictable" obstetric emergency, and most nuchal cords are incidental findings unrelated to outcome. The malpractice analysis turns on the response:
Failure 1 — Failure to recognize the cord emergency promptly. When fetal heart rate monitoring shows sudden, sustained bradycardia or recurrent variable decelerations after rupture of membranes — particularly in a patient with risk factors (breech, polyhydramnios, multiple gestation, high station) — the obstetric team must perform an immediate vaginal examination to exclude cord prolapse. Failure to do so is a recognized basis for malpractice when the injury is consistent with delayed recognition.
Failure 2 — Iatrogenic cord prolapse from negligent procedures. Per the 2018 peer-reviewed review in International Journal of Women's Health, iatrogenic UCP accounts for up to 50% of cases caused by amniotomy with high presenting part, cervical ripening balloon placement, and other procedures performed without adequate preparation for emergent cesarean. Per RCOG Green-top Guideline No. 50, "if it becomes necessary to rupture the membranes with a high presenting part, this should be performed with arrangements in place for immediate caesarean section." Charts documenting amniotomy with high station, no immediate cesarean preparation, and subsequent UCP with fetal injury are a strong basis for malpractice.
Failure 3 — Delayed emergency cesarean. Once UCP is recognized, the standard of care is a category 1 cesarean within 30 minutes per RCOG Green-top Guideline No. 50 and consistent ACOG/peer-reviewed guidance. A 2015 peer-reviewed Japanese cohort study by Hasegawa et al. (n=267 UCP cases out of 2,037,460 total deliveries) reported that emergency cesarean section was associated with significantly reduced odds of poor neonatal outcomes (adjusted odds ratio 0.11), and that the median diagnosis-to-delivery interval was 30 minutes in poor-outcome cases versus 24 minutes in cases with intact survival. When charts document a diagnosis-to-delivery interval substantially longer than this and the resulting injury is consistent with prolonged hypoxia, the case for malpractice is generally strong.
Failure 4 — Failure to identify breech, transverse, or unstable lie and offer planned cesarean. Per ACOG Committee Opinion No. 745 (2018), the recommended mode of delivery for a term singleton breech fetus is cesarean in most circumstances — in part because of the elevated risk of cord prolapse and head entrapment. The same logic applies to transverse and unstable lie. Failure to identify these presentations in the third trimester, or failure to recommend planned cesarean for persistent breech, is a recognized basis for malpractice when UCP subsequently occurs.
Failure 5 — Failure to monitor for and recognize cord-related fetal compromise during labor. Even without overt cord prolapse, recurrent variable decelerations on the fetal heart tracing are pathognomonic for cord compression. Per ACOG's 2025 Clinical Practice Guideline on Intrapartum Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring, Category III tracings including those defined by absent baseline variability with recurrent variable decelerations require immediate intervention. Failure to act on these patterns when cord compression is the suspected cause is the most common malpractice mechanism in cord-related litigation.
New York places no statutory cap on damages in medical malpractice or birth injury cases. Cord-related cases that result in HIE-to-cerebral-palsy, severe cognitive impairment, or wrongful death are among the largest pediatric malpractice recoveries in the state.
Future medical and custodial care is the largest category in catastrophic cases. The CDC estimates the lifetime cost of care for an individual with cerebral palsy at approximately $1 million in 2003 dollars, with medical care costs running roughly 10 times higher than for children without CP. Adjusted for current medical inflation, life care plans in catastrophic cord-related cases routinely run to seven and eight figures.
Lost future earning capacity. A child whose injury precludes competitive employment can recover the full projected lifetime earnings of a comparable uninjured peer.
Pain and suffering damages are not capped in New York. Juries consider the permanence of the injury, the child's life expectancy, and the loss of normal childhood, adolescent, and adult experiences.
Wrongful death. When cord-related injury results in stillbirth or neonatal death, parents may pursue a wrongful death claim under EPTL §5-4.1 within two years of the death. For purely antepartum stillbirth (death before delivery), the wrongful death statute itself does not permit recovery for the fetus's death because the fetus was not a "person" within the meaning of the statute (Endresz v. Friedberg, 24 N.Y.2d 478 (1969)). However, mothers may recover for their own emotional distress damages when malpractice causes stillbirth (Broadnax v. Gonzalez, 2 N.Y.3d 148 (2004)), a rule the Court of Appeals expressly limited to stillbirth and miscarriage in Sheppard-Mobley v. King (4 N.Y.3d 627 (2005)).
Parents' derivative claim. Parents can recover medical expenses they paid on the child's behalf and damages for loss of the child's services but under their own 2.5-year CPLR §214-a statute, which is not tolled by the child's infancy.
FIND OUT WHAT YOUR CHILD'S CORD INJURY CASE IS WORTH →
Porter Law Group's published catastrophic case results include three pediatric birth injury settlements that demonstrate the firm's track record in complex delivery-related injury cases. View all case results →
$8,250,000 Settlement: An infant sustained permanent physical and cognitive disabilities after delayed response to fetal distress during labor the central cord-related fact pattern in which a non-reassuring fetal heart tracing was not addressed in time to prevent hypoxic-ischemic injury. Proceeds covered lifetime medical and educational needs.
$8,300,000 Settlement: A premature infant suffered profound permanent disabilities, including cerebral palsy, after physicians failed to properly manage the mother's pre-gestational diabetes. The structured settlement provides lifetime care and therapy funding.
$8,120,000 Settlement: An infant suffered permanent delivery-related injuries caused by mismanaged labor and delivery. The recovery funded a life-care plan built with the family's physicians and therapists.
Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Cord-related birth injury claims are medical malpractice cases, so the deadline is shorter than a general child injury claim and is subject to a hard 10-year cap that ordinary personal injury cases do not face.
| Category of Defendant | Statute of Limitations | Infancy Toll | Effective Deadline | Primary Statute |
| Private hospital / private physician | 2.5 years | Yes — but capped at 10 years from malpractice | Child's 10th birthday in most cases | CPLR §214-a + CPLR §208 |
| Public hospital (NYC Health + Hospitals, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate, Stony Brook, county hospitals) | 1 year and 90 days after Notice of Claim | No — 90-day Notice of Claim NOT tolled by infancy | 90 days from injury to file Notice of Claim | GML §50-e |
| Wrongful death of infant | 2 years from date of death | N/A | 2 years from death | EPTL §5-4.1 |
| Parents' derivative claim | 2.5 years | No — not tolled by child's infancy | 2.5 years from malpractice | CPLR §214-a |
Did an Umbilical Cord Complication Harm Your Baby?
Let us help. Our clients don't have to pay anything unless we win.
1. Request the complete labor-and-delivery and neonatal records. Under New York Public Health Law §18, you are entitled to your and your child's complete medical records within a reasonable time of a written request. Critical documents include the full continuous fetal heart monitoring strips, umbilical cord blood gas results (arterial and venous), Apgar scores at 1, 5, and 10 minutes, the operative delivery note, and any documentation of cord prolapse, nuchal cord, or true knot.
2. Request the placental pathology report. Per ACOG's 2020 Stillbirth Management Consensus, gross and microscopic examination of the placenta, umbilical cord, and membranes is the single most useful element of evaluating an adverse perinatal outcome. The pathology report can document cord length, true knots, vasa previa, cord insertion abnormalities, and other findings that identify the mechanism of injury.
3. Preserve all neuroimaging. Brain MRI between days 4 and 7 of life is the single most important imaging study for distinguishing acute intrapartum hypoxic injury from chronic antepartum injury. Cranial ultrasound and CT scans are also critical. Request copies on disc and ensure they are preserved indefinitely.
4. Document the fetal heart tracing minute-by-minute. Cord-related cases turn on the FHR strip. The presence and timing of variable decelerations, sustained bradycardia, and the bradycardia-to-delivery interval are the central evidence. Request the full continuous tracing — not just summary notes — and have it preserved alongside any electronic monitoring archive.
5. Document developmental milestones and therapy progress. Keep a dated log of every pediatric, neurology, developmental pediatrics, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy visit. Missed milestones are core evidence of injury severity.
6. Act immediately if your child was born at a public hospital. Births at NYC Health + Hospitals facilities, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate, Stony Brook, or any county-run facility require a Notice of Claim within 90 days under GML §50-e. Missing this deadline can bar the claim entirely.
7. Contact a New York umbilical cord birth injury attorney. Porter Law Group offers free consultations on a contingency-fee basis and handles every stage of the case, from record collection through expert review, litigation, infant compromise approval, and trial.
GET A FREE CASE REVIEW: CALL (833) PORTER-9 →
Porter Law Group represents families in cord-related and other birth injury malpractice cases throughout New York State, with a statewide practice reaching every county and jurisdiction. Our Syracuse headquarters serves Central and Upstate New York, while attorneys travel regularly to downstate courthouses for cases in the five boroughs, Westchester, and Long Island.
Serving Clients statewide , including Syracuse,New York City, Manhattan,Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, Yonkers, White Plains, Utica, Binghamton, Long Island (Nassau and Suffolk Counties), Saratoga Springs, Ithaca.
Wherever your child was injured in New York, call (833) PORTER-9 for a free consultation with an experienced brachial plexus birth injury attorney.

No. Umbilical cord prolapse is classified as an unpredictable obstetric emergency in NIH StatPearls and the 2021 Am J Obstet Gynecol peer-reviewed review by Leung et al. The malpractice analysis turns on the response: did the team recognize the bradycardia or recurrent variable decelerations promptly, exclude cord prolapse on vaginal examination, attempt funic decompression while preparing for emergency cesarean, and achieve a category 1 cesarean within 30 minutes per RCOG Green-top Guideline No. 50? When the chart documents a diagnosis-to-delivery interval substantially longer than 30 minutes — or when the team performed amniotomy with a high presenting part without immediate cesarean preparation, causing iatrogenic prolapse — the case for malpractice is generally strong.
A nuchal cord is the wrapping of the umbilical cord one or more times around the fetal neck. Per a peer-reviewed review citing Larson et al., the overall incidence is approximately 6% at 20 weeks gestational age and 29% at 42 weeks GA, with two or more loops occurring in 2.4% to 8.3% of all pregnancies. The clinical reality is that most nuchal cords are incidental findings and do not affect outcome. A 2012 peer-reviewed prospective study of 1,000 deliveries found nuchal coiling in 20.7% of pregnancies with most having no adverse outcome. The exceptions are rare: very tight nuchal cords (especially with short cord length) and cases with four or more loops, which a 2025 peer-reviewed cohort study identified as an independent predictor of perinatal death (odds ratio 13.40, 95% CI 1.12–160.34). When a nuchal cord causes recurrent variable decelerations during labor and the team fails to act on the FHR pattern, the resulting injury may be actionable — but the nuchal cord itself is not malpractice.
A true knot of the cord (TKUC) is an actual knot in the cord vasculature, formed during pregnancy when fetal movement passes through a loop in the cord. Per peer-reviewed obstetric literature, TKUC occurs in approximately 0.3% to 2.1% of all pregnancies and is rarely diagnosed before delivery. The clinical significance varies — most true knots remain loose throughout pregnancy and produce no adverse outcome. However, a 2025 peer-reviewed cohort study in Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics reported that true knot of cord is a strong predictor of perinatal death with adjusted odds ratio 15.46 (95% CI 9.30–25.70). Risk factors include longer cord length, polyhydramnios, multiparity, advanced maternal age, and male fetal sex. Because TKUC is rarely diagnosed antenatally, malpractice analysis in TKUC cases focuses on intrapartum recognition: did the team identify and act on the resulting FHR abnormalities (decelerations, sustained bradycardia) in time to prevent injury?
Iatrogenic cord prolapse is umbilical cord prolapse caused by an obstetric procedure rather than occurring spontaneously. Per a 2018 peer-reviewed review in International Journal of Women's Health, iatrogenic UCP accounts for up to 50% of all cord prolapse cases and is most commonly caused by amniotomy (artificial rupture of membranes) performed with a high fetal presenting part, fetal blood sampling, and insertion of a cervical ripening balloon. Per RCOG Green-top Guideline No. 50, if amniotomy is necessary with a high presenting part, it should be performed with arrangements in place for immediate cesarean section. When charts document amniotomy with a high station, no immediate cesarean preparation, and subsequent UCP with fetal injury, the case for malpractice is generally strong because the prolapse was both predictable and preventable through proper procedural protocol.
Cord-related injury claims are medical malpractice actions under CPLR §214-a, which imposes a 2.5-year statute of limitations. CPLR §208 tolls the deadline during the child's minority, but caps the toll at 10 years from the malpractice — meaning most cord-related cases must be filed before the child's 10th birthday. Deliveries at public hospitals (NYC Health + Hospitals, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate) require a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the injury under General Municipal Law §50-e, and the infancy toll does not extend the 90-day deadline. Wrongful death claims for stillbirth or neonatal death follow a separate 2-year deadline under EPTL §5-4.1.
Cord-related settlements vary widely based on the severity and permanence of the resulting injury. Cases involving full recovery resolve at modest values, while catastrophic cases involving HIE-to-cerebral-palsy, severe cognitive impairment, or wrongful death routinely settle in the seven- and eight-figure range. TheCDC estimates the lifetime cost of care for an individual with cerebral palsy at approximately $1 million in 2003 dollars, with medical costs running roughly 10 times higher than for children without CP. New York places no statutory cap on damages in medical malpractice cases. Every settlement of a minor's claim must be approved by a judge at an infant compromise hearing under CPLR §1207, and attorney fees follow the sliding scale in Judiciary Law §474-a: 30% of the first $250,000, 25% of the next $250,000, 20% of the next $500,000, 15% of the next $250,000, and 10% of any amount over $1,250,000.
The bradycardia-to-delivery interval is the elapsed time from the onset of sustained fetal bradycardia (most commonly caused by cord compression) to delivery. Per the 2021 Am J Obstet Gynecol peer-reviewed review by Leung et al., cord arterial pH declines significantly with the bradycardia-to-delivery interval at a point-estimate rate of approximately 0.009 per minute (95% CI, 0.0003–0.0180; the wide confidence interval reflects substantial clinical variability between cases). The clinical implication is unambiguous even with the variability: every minute of sustained bradycardia produces measurable additional fetal acidosis and progressive injury risk. The same review notes that pH does not correlate with the duration of intermittent decelerations or the overall decision-to-delivery interval, indicating that intermittent cord compression is reversible while sustained bradycardia indicates progressive injury. This finding quantifies what plaintiff's-firm attorneys have long argued: in cord-related cases, every minute of delayed cesarean matters, and the bradycardia-to-delivery interval is often the central evidence in the litigation.
Stillbirth caused by a cord-related event is among the most devastating outcomes in obstetric care. New York permits a wrongful death claim for an infant who died after live birth, governed by EPTL §5-4.1, with a 2-year deadline from the date of death. For purely antepartum stillbirth (death before delivery), the wrongful death statute itself does not permit recovery for the fetus's death because the fetus was not a "person" within the meaning of the statute (Endresz v. Friedberg, 24 N.Y.2d 478 (1969)). However, mothers may recover for their own emotional distress damages when malpractice causes stillbirth (Broadnax v. Gonzalez, 2 N.Y.3d 148 (2004)), a rule the Court of Appeals expressly limited to stillbirth and miscarriage in Sheppard-Mobley v. King (4 N.Y.3d 627 (2005)). The placental pathology report is critical evidence in any cord-related stillbirth case — per ACOG's 2020 Stillbirth Management Consensus, gross and microscopic examination of the placenta, umbilical cord, and membranes is the single most useful diagnostic study and should be requested in every case.

Michael S. Porter is the founder and managing partner of Porter Law Group, representing New York families in umbilical cord-related, birth injury, medical malpractice, and catastrophic injury cases. A graduate of Harvard University (B.A., 1994) and Syracuse University College of Law (J.D., 1997), Porter served four years as a Captain in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's Corps. Selected to Super Lawyers for 14 consecutive years (2012–2025), he holds a 10.0 Superb rating on Avvo and a Distinguished rating from Martindale-Hubbell.
Bar Admissions: New York State Bar | U.S. District Court, Northern and Western Districts of New York
Memberships: New York State Bar Association, Onondaga County Bar Association, New York State Academy of Trial Lawyers, Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum
If your newborn suffered a cord-related birth injury in New York due to medical negligence, critical deadlines may run faster than you expect: public-hospital cases require a Notice of Claim within 90 days, parents' derivative claims are not tolled by the child's infancy, and the 10-year cap under CPLR §208 closes most birth injury windows before a child's 10th birthday.
Contact Porter Law Group today at (833) PORTER-9 for a free, no-obligation consultation. We operate on a contingency-fee basis, so you pay nothing unless you win.
Phone: +1 833-767-8379
Email: info@porterlawteam.com
Monday to Friday: 8 AM to 5 PM | Saturday and Sunday: Closed

Avoid sharing confidential information via contact form, text, or voicemail as they are not secure. Please be aware that using any of these communication methods does not establish an attorney-client relationship. *By appointment only.
The information contained on this site is proprietary and protected. Any unauthorized or illegal use, copying, or dissemination will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. All content on this site is provided for informational purposes only. It is not, nor should it be taken as medical or legal advice. None of the content on this site is intended to substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Attorney Advertising.
We serve clients in every city and county in New York State. These include places like: The Adirondacks, Albany, Alexandria Bay, Amsterdam, Astoria, Auburn, Ballston Spa, Batavia, Beacon, Binghamton, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Canandaigua, Carthage, Cattaraugus, Catskill, Cayuga Lake, Cazenovia, Chelsea, Clayton, Clifton Park, Cobleskill, Colonie, Cooperstown, Corning, Cortland, Delhi, Delmar, Dunkirk, East Aurora, East Hampton, Elmira, Fayetteville, Finger Lakes, Flushing, Fredonia, Fulton, Garden City, Geneva, Glen Cove, Glens Falls, Gloversville, Gouverneur, Great Neck, Greenwich Village, Hamilton, Hammondsport, Harlem, Haverstraw, Hempstead, Herkimer, Hornell, Hudson, Huntington, Ilion, Ithaca, Jamaica, Jamestown, Johnstown, Kingston, Lake George, Lake Placid, Lewiston, Little Falls, Liverpool, Lockport, Long Island City, Lowville, Malone, Manhattan, Manlius, Massena, Medina, Middletown, Monticello, Montauk, Mount Vernon, New Paltz, New Rochelle, Newburgh, Niagara Falls, North Tonawanda, Norwich, Nyack, Ogdensburg, Old Forge, Olean, Oneida, Oneonta, Ossining, Oswego, Penn Yan, Peekskill, Plattsburgh, Port Chester, Potsdam, Poughkeepsie, Queens, Rhinebeck, Riverhead, Rochester, Rome, Rye, Sag Harbor, Saranac Lake, Saratoga Springs, Schenectady, Seneca Falls, Seneca Lake, Skaneateles, SoHo, Southampton, Spring Valley, Staten Island, Stony Brook, Suffern, Syracuse, Tarrytown, The Bronx, Thousand Islands, Ticonderoga, Troy, Tupper Lake, Utica, Warsaw, Waterloo, Watertown, Watkins Glen, Wellsville, White Plains, Williamsburg, Woodstock, Yonkers, and many more communities throughout New York State.
Copyright © 2026, Porter Law Group. Personal Injury Lawyers
Made with 💛 by Gold Penguin