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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About your type of claim

About your type of injury

About Brett & Coats

About Major Personal Injury, Auto Accident and Wrongful Death Claims

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Whatcom County Museum Photo - © 2005, Washington Injury, Brett & Coats - Photo by Consultwebs.comWhatcom County, Washington lies in the northernmost region of the state, bordering British Columbia, Canada. The county covers more than 2,500 square miles of lush natural beauty, much of it being National Forest and Parkland. Fifty miles east of the county seat of Bellingham looms magnificent Mount Baker. Towering at almost 11,000 feet, this ice-clad volcano gives Washington State its longest ski season. The majority of Whatcom County is mountainous, though its western section lies along the coastline of Puget Sound. Bellingham's Squalicum Harbor, found ninety miles north of Seattle, is the second largest deep-water port on the Sound.

The early inhabitants of the region were the Nooksack Indians, whose reservation lies close to Bellingham. The tribe earns income today from its casino, as well as their marvelous crafts. Whatcom County was named after one of their Indian chiefs. Fur trappers and traders settled in the port area in the late 1700's, and then the lumber industry began to flourish inland. Washington incorporated the county in 1854. Discovery of coal and gold brought brief bursts of prosperity for the region, but the somewhat unstable landscape of this volcanic terrain caused disastrous cave-ins, and prospectors moved on. Natural resources still play a vital role in Whatcom County's economy, but agriculture, salmon canneries and shipbuilding add to its prosperity

Bellingham Bay Photo - © 2005, Washington Injury, Brett & Coats - Photo by Consultwebs.comThe Census 2000 counted Whatcom County's population as over 166,000, scattered through nineteen cities, towns and villages. Four wonderful institutes of higher learning service the residents. Western Washington University, founded in 1893 is one of six state-funded, four-year schools in the state. Whatcom Community College and Bellingham Technical College offer a variety of two-year degrees, and the Northwest Indian College specifically serves the Native American residents.

The city of Sumas is one of the border-crossings into Canada. It is only two minutes from Abbotsford, BC, one of the fifth-largest cities in British Columbia, and Vancouver is less than an hour's drive. The town of Point Roberts is a bit of a geographic oddity. Situated on the tip of the Canadian Peninsula, it remains part of Whatcom County, but the only way to reach it, except by water, is to enter Canada and then re-enter the U.S. The 1,300 residents are proud of their 'almost heaven, almost Canada' town. The Lighthouse Marine Park on the western shore is considered one of the best sites to view Orca whales or magnificent sunsets. Lummi and Eliza Islands are tiny jewels of communities in beautiful Bellingham Bay. One of the fastest growing towns in Whatcom County is Birch Bay, located twenty miles north of Bellingham, just off Interstate 5. Boasting the warmest Pacific waters north of California, it also receives almost 25% less rain than neighboring Bellingham, making it a beachcombers Paradise. Crabbing and clamming provide local restaurants with the finest sea fare available in Birch Bay's downtown district.

The charming city of Blaine overlooks Drayton Harbor and draws its share of tourists each year. It too is a Canadian border crossing, and home to the Peace Arch State Park, where a monument stands with one part on American soil, and the other on Canadian land. Each year, a Hands Across the Border celebration is held, honoring the peace that exists between both nations. Other major cities in Whatcom County are Everson, Ferndale, Lynden and Nooksack.

To the east of the populated areas lies the rugged wilderness of the Cascade National Forest and Parklands area. A rich haven for wildlife, nature-lovers and sportsmen, the Cascades remain one of our true national treasures. Whatcom County, Washington, stretching across the mountains to the ocean really does it have it all.

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