Corrections log

Spotted an error? Tell us, and watch us fix it in public.

Personal-injury content has real consequences. Errors must be corrected publicly and quickly. This page is both the way to report an error and the running log of every substantive correction we have made.

Last reviewed 2026-05-16

How to report a correction

If you have spotted a factual error on this site , a misquoted statute, an incorrect deadline, a misattributed citation, an outdated rule , please email the details to corrections@caseworthnow.com. Include:

  • The URL of the page in question.
  • The specific statement you believe is incorrect (quoted exactly).
  • The correct information.
  • A primary-source citation supporting the correction (statute, case, official publication).

Corrections involving primary law (statute amendments, court decisions, regulatory changes) are verified against the official source and published within 24 hours of verification. Corrections involving editorial content (prose accuracy, methodology descriptions) are typically published within 7 days.

How we handle corrections

Every substantive correction is logged below with:

  • The date of the correction.
  • The URL affected.
  • The original incorrect statement.
  • The corrected statement.
  • The primary source consulted to verify the correction.

We do not silently edit content. Material changes are timestamped, and the prior version can be retrieved through standard web-archiving services (Internet Archive Wayback Machine).

Public corrections log

The log below records every substantive correction made since the site\'s launch. Routine typo fixes and minor editorial cleanup are not logged.

DatePageCorrectionSource
2026-05-16 /statute-of-limitations/louisiana/ Updated Louisiana personal-injury SOL from one year to two years, reflecting July 2024 amendment of La. Civ. Code art. 3492. La. Civ. Code art. 3492 (as amended 2024)
2026-05-16 /statute-of-limitations/florida/ Updated Florida personal-injury SOL from four years to two years, reflecting March 2023 enactment of HB 837. Updated comparative-fault rule from pure to modified 50% bar. Fla. Stat. § 95.11 (as amended by HB 837)

What we do not correct

Differences of opinion about how to interpret a statute, characterizations that are accurate but contested, and methodological choices in the AI tools are not "corrections." They are addressed through follow-up content or methodology updates, not through the corrections log.

The corrections log is reserved for factual errors that, once identified, are unambiguously wrong against a verifiable primary source.

Why we publish a corrections log

Most informational sites , including, unfortunately, most personal-injury sites , silently edit content when errors are pointed out. The public corrections log is an editorial commitment: errors will be made (we are human and so is the AI), and the only honest response is to log them, fix them, and learn from them.

If this site\'s corrections log is ever empty for an extended period, it is more likely that we are missing errors than that we are not making them. We encourage and welcome corrections.