The phone call came. The knock on the door. The officer standing there with terrible news. Someone you love is gone, and you are left holding all the questions no one prepared you to ask.
You are grieving. You are trying to plan a funeral. You are trying to hold your family together. And somewhere in the back of your mind, you know that what happened should not have happened—that someone’s choice or someone’s negligence took the person you love away from you.
You are not sure what to do with that knowledge. You are not sure if it matters. You are not even sure if thinking about it right now makes you a bad person.
It does not.
Accountability matters. Not because it brings anyone back. Not because it fills the space they left. But because it names what happened, it holds people responsible, and it can stop the same thing from happening to another family.
That is what a wrongful death claim is. It is not about profit. It is not about exploiting grief. It is about making sure the person or company whose actions caused this loss answers for it.
McCormick & Murphy represents families in Pueblo, Pueblo West, Cañon City, Florence, Walsenburg, and across southern Colorado who have lost someone because of someone else’s wrongdoing. Kirk McCormick and Jay Murphy know that no settlement will ever be enough. But they also know that families deserve answers, accountability, and the financial stability to move forward without being crushed by medical bills, funeral costs, and lost income.
A wrongful death happens when someone dies because of another person’s negligence, recklessness, or intentional act. The person responsible could be an individual, a business, a government agency, or a corporation.
Common causes of wrongful death in Pueblo include:
If someone you love died because someone else acted carelessly, recklessly, or intentionally, you may have the right to file a wrongful death claim. The specifics of your situation matter, and that is where a lawyer who knows Colorado wrongful death law can help.
Colorado law is specific about who has the legal right to bring a wrongful death claim. The lawsuit must be filed by the personal representative of the deceased person’s estate—usually someone named in the will, or someone appointed by the court if there is no will.
But the claim itself is filed on behalf of certain family members, called statutory beneficiaries. In Colorado, that includes:
If none of these people exist, the claim can be brought on behalf of the next of kin, which may include siblings or other relatives who were financially dependent on the deceased.
This matters because not everyone who is grieving has the legal standing to file. A longtime partner who was not married, a stepchild who was never legally adopted, or a sibling when parents are still living may not be able to bring a claim under Colorado law—even if their loss is just as real.
Kirk and Jay can walk you through who qualifies in your specific case and make sure the claim is filed correctly.
A wrongful death claim is meant to compensate the surviving family for both the financial and emotional losses caused by the death. Colorado law recognizes several categories of damages.
Daños económicos cover the measurable financial harm. That includes:
Daños no económicos address the human loss. That includes:
There is no formula that makes this fair. No amount of money brings someone back. But the law recognizes that families should not be financially destroyed on top of emotionally devastated. A wrongful death settlement or verdict is meant to provide stability so you can grieve without losing your home, your savings, or your future.
In Colorado, you generally have two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit. That deadline is firm. If you miss it, you lose the right to bring a claim, no matter how strong your case is.
Two years sounds like a long time when you are standing at a funeral. It is not. Grief does not follow a schedule. Investigations take time. Evidence has to be gathered, witnesses interviewed, experts consulted. Waiting too long can mean losing critical proof or running out of time entirely.
Some families feel guilty about moving forward with a claim while they are still grieving. That guilt is understandable. It is also misplaced. Taking legal action does not mean you are over it. It means you are making sure the person or company responsible is held accountable.
McCormick & Murphy will handle the legal process so you do not have to. You should be with your family. You should be taking care of each other. You should not be fighting insurance companies or filing court papers.
Most families have never been through this before. They do not know what to expect, and they worry that pursuing a claim will turn into a years-long courtroom battle that keeps the wound open.
It does not have to work that way.
The process usually starts with an investigation. Kirk and Jay will gather medical records, accident reports, witness statements, employment records, and any other evidence that shows what happened and who is responsible. That might involve working with accident reconstruction experts, medical professionals, or financial analysts.
Once the facts are clear, your lawyer will file a claim with the at-fault party’s insurance company. In many cases, the insurer will make a settlement offer. Sometimes that offer is fair. Often it is not. Insurance companies know that grieving families are vulnerable, and they make lowball offers hoping you will take the first check just to be done with it.
Your lawyer’s job is to evaluate that offer against what your family has actually lost—not just now, but over the years to come. If the offer does not reflect the true value of your claim, your lawyer will negotiate. If the insurance company still will not offer a fair settlement, your lawyer will file a lawsuit and take the case to court.
Many wrongful death cases settle before trial. When they do go to trial, it is because the insurance company refused to take responsibility or offered an amount so far below what is fair that settlement was not an option.
A personal injury claim is brought by the person who was hurt. A wrongful death claim is brought on behalf of the person who died.
That sounds simple, but it changes everything about the case. In a personal injury claim, the injured person can recover damages for their own medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and loss of quality of life. In a wrongful death claim, those damages are part of the estate claim, but the family also recovers separately for their own losses—loss of companionship, guidance, financial support, and the emotional devastation of losing someone they love.
The two types of claims can overlap. If someone was injured in an accident and survived for days or weeks before dying, the estate may bring both a personal injury claim for the suffering before death and a wrongful death claim for the losses after. If the person died immediately, there may be only a wrongful death claim.
Colorado law treats these claims differently, and the damages available are different. That is why working with a lawyer who knows wrongful death law matters.
Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule. That means even if the person who died was partially at fault for the accident, you can still recover damages—as long as they were not more than 50 percent responsible.
If your loved one was 20 percent at fault and the other driver was 80 percent at fault, your damages will be reduced by 20 percent. If your loved one was 51 percent or more at fault, you cannot recover anything under Colorado law.
Insurance companies will look for any reason to shift blame. They will argue that your loved one was speeding, not wearing a seatbelt, or should have seen the danger coming. That is part of their strategy to reduce what they have to pay.
Your lawyer’s job is to investigate what actually happened, challenge unfair accusations, and make sure fault is assigned correctly. Just because the insurance company claims your loved one was partially responsible does not make it true.
Kirk McCormick and Jay Murphy have spent their careers representing people who have been hurt and families who have lost someone because of someone else’s wrongdoing. They do not handle dozens of practice areas. They focus on personal injury and wrongful death because those cases require a level of attention, empathy, and legal skill that you cannot deliver if you are stretched too thin.
They know Pueblo. They know the courts, the local defense attorneys, and the insurance companies that operate in southern Colorado. They know how these cases are fought and won.
More than that, they know what it is like to sit across from a family that is broken and help them understand that pursuing justice is not selfish—it is necessary.
You will not be handed off to a paralegal or left wondering what is happening with your case. Kirk and Jay are accessible. They return calls. They explain what is happening in language that makes sense. They do not talk down to you, and they do not rush you through the process.
They represent families in Pueblo, Pueblo West, Salt Creek, Blende, Avondale, Boone, Colorado City, Rye, Cañon City, Florence, Penrose, Walsenburg, and Aguilar. If someone you love died because of someone else’s negligence or wrongdoing, they will help you understand your rights and what comes next.
Justice does not look the way people think it does. It is not dramatic. It is not loud. It is not a moment in a courtroom where everything suddenly feels fair again.
Justice is making sure the hospital changes its protocols so the same mistake does not kill someone else’s parent. Justice is making sure the trucking company that pushed its drivers past the legal limit gets held accountable. Justice is making sure your family does not lose the house because the bills kept coming even after the income stopped.
Justice is knowing that the person or company responsible had to answer for what they did.
It will not make the grief go away. But it will give you one less thing to carry.
If you lost someone you love because of someone else’s negligence, you do not have to make any decisions today. You do not have to know what you want or how you feel about pursuing a claim. You just have to make a phone call.
Llame a McCormick & Murphy al 888-668-1182. Tell them what happened. Ask your questions. Get answers from someone who has handled wrongful death cases before and knows what comes next.
The consultation is free. You will not be pressured. You will not be handed a contract and told to sign. You will sit down with Kirk or Jay, and they will listen. Then they will tell you what your options are.
You can visit their office at 301 N Main St in Pueblo or learn more at mccormickmurphy.com/pueblo-personal-injury-attorneys.
You have rights. You have options. And you have time—but not forever. Let someone who knows this area of law help you figure out what comes next.
In Colorado, a wrongful death claim must be filed by the personal representative of the deceased person’s estate. This is usually someone named in the will or appointed by the court if no will exists. However, the claim is brought on behalf of specific family members known as statutory beneficiaries—the surviving spouse, children, or parents if there is no spouse or children. If none of these relatives exist, the claim can be filed on behalf of the next of kin who were financially dependent on the deceased. Even if you are grieving deeply, you may not have legal standing to file unless you fall into one of these categories, which is why consulting with a wrongful death lawyer is essential.
Colorado law gives you two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit. This deadline is strict, and missing it means losing your right to pursue a claim no matter how strong your case is. Two years may sound like enough time, but grief does not follow a schedule, and building a solid case requires gathering evidence, interviewing witnesses, and consulting experts. Waiting too long can mean losing critical proof or simply running out of time. It is important to speak with a lawyer sooner rather than later so the legal process can move forward while you focus on your family.
Colorado wrongful death claims cover both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages include measurable financial losses such as medical bills from treatment before death, funeral and burial expenses, lost wages and benefits your loved one would have earned, loss of household services, and loss of inheritance. Non-economic damages address the human impact—loss of companionship, comfort, care, and guidance, as well as the emotional pain and suffering experienced by surviving family members. For a surviving spouse, this includes loss of consortium. While no amount of money can replace the person you lost, these damages are meant to provide financial stability so your family can grieve without facing financial ruin.
Not necessarily. Many wrongful death cases are resolved through settlement negotiations with the at-fault party’s insurance company without ever going to trial. Your lawyer will investigate the facts, file a claim, and negotiate on your behalf. If the insurance company offers a fair settlement that reflects the true value of your losses, the case can be resolved outside of court. However, if the insurer refuses to take responsibility or makes an offer far below what your family deserves, your lawyer may file a lawsuit and take the case to trial. Most families prefer to settle, and most cases do—but the willingness to go to court if necessary is what often pushes insurance companies to make fair offers.
A personal injury claim is brought by the person who was injured and covers their own medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and loss of quality of life. A wrongful death claim is brought on behalf of the person who died and covers the losses suffered by their surviving family members—loss of financial support, companionship, guidance, and emotional devastation. In some situations, both claims may exist. If someone was injured and survived for a period before dying, the estate may bring a personal injury claim for the suffering before death and a wrongful death claim for the losses after. If the person died immediately, only a wrongful death claim applies. Colorado law treats these claims differently, and the types of damages available vary, which is why working with a lawyer who understands wrongful death law is critical.
Yes, as long as your loved one was not more than 50 percent responsible for the accident. Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule, which means your damages will be reduced by the percentage of fault assigned to the deceased. For example, if your loved one was 30 percent at fault, your total damages would be reduced by 30 percent. If they were 51 percent or more at fault, you cannot recover anything under Colorado law. Insurance companies often try to shift blame to reduce what they owe, so it is important to have a lawyer who will investigate the facts, challenge unfair accusations, and make sure fault is assigned correctly.
Las demandas por homicidio culposo ofrecen un recurso legal vital para los familiares sobrevivientes que han perdido a un ser querido debido a acciones negligentes, imprudentes o intencionales de otra persona. En Colorado, estas demandas se rigen por estatutos específicos que determinan quién puede presentarlas, cuándo debe hacerlo y qué compensación pueden recibir. Nuestros abogados de homicidio culposo en Pueblo, en McCormick & Murphy, PC, cuentan con más de 50 años de experiencia combinada para ayudar a las familias a navegar estos complejos procedimientos legales durante su duelo.
La ley de Colorado impone plazos estrictos para presentar demandas por homicidio culposo. Generalmente, los familiares elegibles deben presentar la demanda dentro de los dos años posteriores al fallecimiento. Sin embargo, ciertas circunstancias pueden extender o acortar este plazo, como casos que involucran a entidades gubernamentales o actos delictivos. Incumplir este plazo generalmente invalida su derecho a una indemnización, por lo que una consulta legal inmediata es esencial tras la pérdida de un ser querido por circunstancias potencialmente ilícitas.
La ley de Colorado restringe específicamente quién puede presentar reclamos por muerte por negligencia y establece una jerarquía de presentación basada en el tiempo:
Este sistema jerárquico difiere significativamente del de muchos otros estados y requiere una navegación cuidadosa con un asesor legal experimentado.
Las demandas por muerte por negligencia en Pueblo surgen de numerosos escenarios en los que la negligencia o la mala conducta conducen a resultados fatales:
Para prevalecer en estos casos, los familiares sobrevivientes deben demostrar que la muerte fue resultado de la conducta negligente, imprudente o intencional de alguien a través de una recopilación exhaustiva de pruebas y testimonios de expertos.
Los demandantes por muerte por negligencia en Colorado pueden recuperar varios tipos de daños, aunque la ley estatal impone ciertos límites a los daños no económicos:
El proceso de presentar un reclamo por muerte por negligencia en Pueblo generalmente implica varias etapas:
Durante este proceso, manejamos todos los aspectos legales mientras brindamos apoyo compasivo para ayudar a su familia a concentrarse en la curación.
Para probar con éxito reclamos por muerte por negligencia a menudo se requieren testimonios de varios testigos expertos, entre ellos:
Nuestra firma trabaja con profesionales respetados en estos campos para construir casos convincentes para nuestros clientes.
Si ha perdido a un ser querido debido a la negligencia o mala conducta de otra persona en Pueblo, los compasivos abogados especializados en homicidio culposo de McCormick & Murphy, PC están aquí para ayudarle. Si bien ninguna compensación puede reemplazar a su ser querido, una demanda exitosa por homicidio culposo puede brindarle seguridad financiera y un sentido de justicia en estos momentos difíciles.
Llame al 888-668-1182 o contáctenos en línea hoy mismo para una consulta gratuita y confidencial. Atendemos todos los casos de homicidio culposo con honorarios de contingencia, lo que significa que no pagará honorarios legales a menos que obtengamos una indemnización en su nombre.
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