Bus Accident
$7 Million
Bus passenger suffered a neck injury requiring surgery
25+ years. Millions recovered.
Koenigsberg delivers.
Pay Nothing Unless We Win
Koenigsberg & Associates have a proven track record fighting for our clients. We're committed to securing your recovery and getting you back on your feet.
The experienced attorneys at Koenigsberg & Associates will listen to your needs, organize the facts, evidence, and details of your case, and aggressively pursue legal action until you get the compensation that you deserve:
From the OR to the ER, we hold New York doctors, hospitals, and health systems accountable.
Missed cancer, stroke, heart attack, and infection diagnoses that turn treatable conditions into life-threatening ones.
Wrong-site surgery, retained instruments, nicked organs, and never events that violate the most basic standards of care.
Failure to monitor fetal distress, mismanaged delivery, and improper use of forceps or vacuum causing lifelong injury to mother or child.
Dosing errors, intubation injuries, and failure to monitor that cause brain damage and death on the operating table.
Wrong drug, wrong dose, dangerous interactions, and pharmacy dispensing mistakes that harm patients.
Triage failures, missed diagnoses, and delayed care in busy New York ERs that turn survivable conditions into catastrophes.
Sepsis, MRSA, and C. diff from inadequate sterilization, hand hygiene, and post-operative care.
Bedsores, falls, missed warning signs, and post-surgical complications that go unaddressed until it's too late.
Surgery and treatment performed without explaining the material risks a reasonable patient would want to know.
When the people meant to heal you cause harm, the consequences are often catastrophic and lifelong.
Anoxic brain injury, stroke, and TBI from delayed diagnosis, anesthesia errors, or surgical complications.
HIE, brachial plexus injuries, Erb's palsy, and cerebral palsy caused by negligent labor and delivery management.
Treatable cancers that progress to terminal disease because of misread imaging, ignored symptoms, or delayed biopsy.
Permanent disability and death from ERs and clinics that fail to recognize textbook stroke and cardiac warning signs.
Organ failure, amputation, and death from hospital-acquired infections that go undetected or untreated.
Perforations, nerve damage, internal bleeding, and adhesions from negligent surgical technique.
Permanent loss of function from spinal procedures, anesthesia errors, and undiagnosed compressive injuries.
Loss of limbs from missed compartment syndrome, untreated infection, and uncontrolled diabetic complications.
When medical negligence takes a loved one, surviving family can recover for pecuniary loss and the deceased's conscious pain and suffering.
Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider — a doctor, nurse, hospital, or other professional — fails to meet the accepted standard of care, and that failure causes injury. A bad outcome alone is not malpractice. We must show that a competent provider, in the same field and under the same circumstances, would have done something different.
Indicators include unexpected surgical complications, missed or delayed diagnoses (especially of cancer or stroke), medication errors, birth injuries, and significant changes in a treatment plan after an error. The only reliable way to know is to have the medical records reviewed by qualified experts — which we arrange at no cost to you.
New York requires a doctor's affirmation of merit at the start of most malpractice cases, and proof of the standard of care and causation throughout. We retain board-certified specialists in the same field as the defendant to review records and testify. Without them, even strong cases cannot be proven.
The general statute of limitations is two years and six months from the date of the malpractice or the end of continuous treatment for the same condition. There are important extensions — for example, the Lavern's Law discovery rule for cancer misdiagnosis and special rules for minors and for public hospitals. Contact a lawyer quickly so the right deadline is identified.
Yes, but the rules are different. Claims against public hospitals or municipal employees require a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the malpractice and a lawsuit within one year and 90 days. Missing the Notice of Claim deadline almost always ends the case, so urgency matters even more than in a private malpractice case.
1213 Avenue U
Brooklyn, NY 11229
282 Flatbush Ave, Suite 2
Brooklyn, NY 11217
80-02 Kew Gardens Road, Suite 5001
Kew Gardens, NY 11415
225B East 149th Street
Bronx, NY 10451