About Barakh Law Firm, LLC — Personal Injury Fort Lee New Jersey
Barakh Law Firm represents personal injury Fort Lee residents and commuters injured on the George Washington Bridge corridor. Specifically, the firm serves Bergen County clients in car crashes, truck collisions, and pedestrian cases. Because Bergen County recorded 18 traffic fatalities in 2024, demand for skilled local injury counsel is steady. As a result, the firm has handled cases across the county’s busiest intersections.
The firm covers Fort Lee, Englewood, Hackensack, and the broader Bergen County area. Furthermore, attorneys handle insurance negotiations and filings at the Bergen County Superior Court in Hackensack. To find more personal injury attorneys in Fort Lee, browse the directory.
What Clients Say
Bergen County reviewers consistently describe the firm as the office that handles Hudson and Bergen crash cases personally rather than passing files to junior associates. Clients mention regular phone updates throughout treatment, transparent contingency-fee agreements before the first deposition, and detailed lien-reduction work after settlement at the Bergen County courthouse — the unglamorous numbers work that adds real money to a final check.
Personal Injury Fort Lee — Practice Areas & Services
- Car crashes on the George Washington Bridge approach and Routes 4, 9W, and 46
- Truck and bus collisions across northern New Jersey
- Pedestrian and bicycle injury claims
- Slip-and-fall and other premises liability matters
- Wrongful death cases under the New Jersey Wrongful Death Act
- Insurance bad-faith and underinsured motorist coverage disputes
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file a personal injury claim in New Jersey?
New Jersey’s statute of limitations gives most accident victims two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit. Claims against public entities have a 90-day notice deadline under the Tort Claims Act. Missing either deadline usually bars the case completely.
How much does a personal injury lawyer cost in Fort Lee?
Most New Jersey personal injury firms work on contingency, charging up to 33.33 percent on the first $750,000 of recovery, with reduced percentages above that. Clients pay nothing if the case doesn’t recover. Court rules cap fees in most matters.
Does New Jersey’s choice of insurance affect my case?
Yes — New Jersey’s verbal threshold limits non-economic damages for drivers who chose the limitation when buying coverage. The “no limitation” option preserves full rights to recover pain and suffering. A consultation usually clarifies which option applies to your policy.
Quick Facts: Personal Injury in Fort Lee, New Jersey
- County fatalities: Bergen County recorded 18 traffic deaths in 2024, the third-highest in New Jersey — New Jersey State Police — Fatal Crash Statistics
- Statewide fatalities: New Jersey recorded 542 traffic deaths in 2024, up 15 percent from 2023 — New Jersey State Police
- Statute of limitations: New Jersey allows two years to file most personal injury suits — NJSA 2A:14-2

