Results
  • $3,500,000 - Pedestrian struck by train.
  • $2,500,000 - Wrongful death of teenage boy in jet ski collision.
  • $2,304,142 - Largest Wrongful death jury verdict in Skagit County history.
  • $2,023,000 - Largest arbitration award in San Juan County history.
  • $1,750,000 - Closed head injury in rollover.
  • $1,000,000 - Wrongful death of teenage bicyclist hit by truck.
  • $800,000 - Largest wrongful death jury verdict in Kittitas County history.
  • $733,785 - Largest wrongful death jury verdict for minor in Whatcom County history.
  • $650,000 - Wrongful death from defective highway design.
  • $640,000 - Sexual Harassment.
  • $600,000 - Wrongful death settlement against driver who fell asleep at wheel.
  • $555,000 - Fractured hip caused by auto collision.
  • $500,000 - Foot fractures from head on collision.
  • $500,000 - Negligent supervision of probationer lead to death of child.
  • $490,000 - Pedestrian suffered a fractured leg.
  • $485,873 - Knee and shoulder injuries caused by car crash.
  • 175,000 - Fractured ankle from fall on ice on a motel sidewalk.
  • Past results are not a guarantee of future success.
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Table of Contents

About your type of claim

About your type of injury

About Brett & Coats

About Major Personal Injury, Auto Accident and Wrongful Death Claims

Our Community

Wenatchee, Washington is located in the central part of the state, on the eastern slops of the Cascades Mountains, midway between Spokane and Seattle.   Wenatchee is in Chelan County, and is the county seat. The City of Wenatchee’s unique name is derived from the areas first residents; Salish-speaking division of the Pisquose Indians known as the Wenatchi.  Their name meant “river issuing from a canyon”, referring to the Wenatchee River.

Wenatchee WA was founded by a group of Seattle businessmen in 1890, who saw the area’s potential as a productive agricultural region, due to the arid climate, rich volcanic soil, and proximity to the Columbia and Wenatchee Rivers.   The expansion of the Great Northern Railway in 1892 provided much needed access to Wenatchee; before this time, the scenic beauty of the surrounding mountains also provided a barrier to trade and transportation. The current population  (2007) of Wenatchee is 30,270 residents; the expected growth is 268,275 residents by 2025.

The Wenatchee Valley College, established 1939, covers a district the size of Massachusetts and Rhode Island combined, covering more than 10,000 square miles of Chelan, Douglas and Okanogan counties.  Wells House, a must-see for its castle-like turrets, was built of hand-hewn stone from the Columbia River.

Wenatchee is at the crossroads of three major highways: U.S. Highway 2 provides a westbound connection to the cities of Seattle and Everett, and Eastbound to Spokane.  U.S. Highway 97 connects with Ellensburg and Yakima to the South and Chelan and Okanogan to the North.  State Route 28 provides direct access to the cities of Quincy, Ephrata, and Moses Lake. Link Transit provides public transportation, and replica trolleys operate in downtown Wenatchee.

Wenatchee, home of premium wines, is known as “The Apple Capitol of the World”.  The city’s newspaper, the Wenatchee Daily World, has used “The Apple Capital of the World.” as the paper’s masthead on since 1925, and images of apples abound throughout the city. Washington State’s Apple Blossom Festival has been held in Wenatchee each spring since 1920. Entertainment at the renowned Performing Arts Center of Wenatchee at the Stanley Civic Center,  concertos at Sleeping Lady Mountain Retreat or at the Icicle Creek Music Center, the Mariachi Festival, and the Fiestas Mexicanas which celebrates Mexican Independence day each fall provide  afull calendar of happenings in Wenatchee.

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For an alternative, more detailed form to use in receiving a free claim evaluation, click here. Detailed Claim Review