Paralyzed after a pool accident, Amy Wert G鈥17 is advocating for those with physical or intellectual limitations.
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鈥淓verything happens for a reason? I hate that saying.鈥
It鈥檚 an early summer morning, and Amy Wert, a Law graduate from December 2017, is describing over the phone to me her research into America鈥檚 mass shootings at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, and a Buffalo, New York, grocery store. From what she can tell 鈥 admittedly, it hasn鈥檛 been an exhaustive review 鈥 protocols are almost nonexistent for rescuing individuals with physical handicaps caught in the middle of mass casualty events.
If you don鈥檛 know Wert, or haven鈥檛 recently been in touch, you might think it鈥檚 an unusual area of interest. Most reports of the school shooting have focused on law enforcement failures. At the grocer, it鈥檚 the motivation of the gunman.
If you do know Wert, it makes complete sense. This is what happens when a swimming pool accident shatters your C4 and C5 vertebrae, leaving you paralyzed from the chest down with limited arm movement, a motorized wheelchair your lifeline to the outside world.
Her reflection, however, wasn鈥檛 in response to the mass shootings. It was about her own journey. 鈥淚 can be myself without my body to move in, but I wouldn鈥檛 be myself if this injury had affected my brain,鈥 Wert says. 鈥淭he surgeon said to my mom that it was a miracle.鈥
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Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, is a two-hour drive from New York City. In the shadows of the Pocono Mountains, it鈥檚 where Wert excelled in school and, growing up, loved nothing more than Nancy Drew novels and 鈥淟aw & Order: SVU鈥 episodes. Both inspired her interest in criminal law even before the oldest of three chose to attend Iona University.
Once in college, the mock trial team kept Wert busy between her English and political science courses. Three hours of practice on Tuesdays. Four hours on Saturdays. Monthly competitions. Wert was named a team captain her senior year, which helped prepare her to enter law school the summer following graduation.聽At 乱伦视频 School of Law, Wert continued building trial advocacy skills. She placed second with classmate Brittany Hart in the Intramural Moot Court Competition, joined the Moot Court Board, and completed a residency-in-practice with the Guilford County District Attorney鈥檚 Office before graduating in December 2017.
Matthew Groves L’11 served as a mentor for Wert as she studied for the bar exam and clearly remembers what set her apart from others he has helped.
鈥淚t was her confidence,鈥 Groves recalls. 鈥淪he knew what she was doing and where she was going and it was a matter of having someone help keep her from common potholes, both during bar preparation and in her search for a job. From a mentor鈥檚 perspective, it is so much easier when somebody knows what they want and isn鈥檛 afraid to go get it. All you have to do is point them in the right direction.鈥
After passing the bar exam in the District of Columbia, Wert worked as a legal content editor for the American Association for Justice, practiced white collar defense for a small Maryland firm, and later assisted with document review for Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP in Washington.
Then COVID hit. The firm sent home its staff. Her lease was almost up, and Wert decided to save money by temporarily moving back in with her mother in Wilkes-Barre. Who knew how long the pandemic and remote work might last?
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The accident happened May 8, 2021. Wert was visiting Washington to celebrate a friend鈥檚 graduation from a master鈥檚 degree program at American University. A group gathered around a hotel pool on an unseasonably warm day. Wert saw no pavement warnings. She didn鈥檛 know there was no deep end.

What she鈥檒l never forget is the sound of her head hitting concrete or the sensation of floating face down in just over three feet of water knowing she needed air 鈥渂ut my body wasn鈥檛 listening.鈥 A friend turned her over and kept her talking until paramedics arrived. She soon lost consciousness.
Early the next morning, Wert awoke in George Washington University Hospital. 鈥淣o one ever told me, 鈥榶ou鈥檙e paralyzed.鈥 It was still way too early,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淲hat I did know was I couldn鈥檛 feel my legs.鈥
She鈥檇 remain in intensive care for nearly a month before transferring to Shepherd Center in Atlanta, one of the nation鈥檚 few hospitals specializing in medical treatment for spinal cord and brain injuries. Daily visits to the gym with raised mat platforms helped Wert regain posture and balance. Breathing exercises strengthened her atrophied torso. Occupational therapy taught her how to hold utensils in hands without finger function.
Then there was the wheelchair, which gave Wert her first glimpse into the obstacles faced by those with physical limitations. Several weeks into her stay, Wert ventured outdoors to begin navigating the community with assistive technology. She returned to the hospital sore from the bumps and gaps in the sidewalk.
She moved back home to Wilkes-Barre in September 2021. Doctors told her that for patients who commit to aggressive therapy, progress toward renewed mobility can be made for about two years from the date of injury. Wert still isn鈥檛 done with her thrice-a-week therapy regime.
Through it all, from Washington to Atlanta and then back to Wilkes-Barre, Wert鈥檚 mother was at her side. 鈥淪he was there every day, fighting for everything I needed,鈥 Amy Wert says. 鈥淚f she felt I wasn鈥檛 getting help, people would hear about it. The only reason I鈥檓 doing as well as I am doing today is because Claire is my mother.鈥
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Claire Wert has worked in the insurance industry for the better part of three decades. She knows the nuances of filing claims. She鈥檚 also familiar with the public benefits that help those like her daughter who live with permanent disabilities. By the time her daughter had transferred to Atlanta for her recovery, Medicaid and Social Security paperwork was already filed.
It didn鈥檛 take long for both women to discover the world rarely pays heed to people like Amy. Crosswalks. Sidewalks. Parking spaces. Entries and egresses to public spaces such as grocery stores, restaurants and retailers. In many places, scant attention is paid to accessibility or code enforcement for those who ignore the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Those are just the visible obstacles. Since her injury, Amy also has discovered website accessibility, housing needs and employment options that affect those with limited physical capabilities. The kicker? People with disabilities who need attorneys often are those least able to afford legal services. Medical costs make it hard to marshal the resources for a lawyer.
鈥淚f this accident didn鈥檛 happen, I truly believe she鈥檇 be somewhere taking the world by storm. We just have to figure out how she鈥檚 going to do that in this new world.鈥
Friends from law school who keep in touch with Wert have witnessed the evolution in her career aspirations. 鈥淪he鈥檚 a passionate person and she鈥檚 an advocate. She always has been,鈥 says Haley Mendola, Law Class of 2018 and one of Wert鈥檚 mentees as a first-year student. 鈥淎my鈥檚 tough and she鈥檚 not afraid to speak her mind.鈥
Amy lived with her mother for about a year after returning to Wilkes-Barre from Atlanta. She has since moved into a wheelchair-accessible house that her father had a hand in designing and building. Claire continues to provide Amy with assistance on weekends, and the entire family has been grateful for the outpouring of community support through fundraisers and GoFundMe accounts that bridged their needs in the early months of recovery.
The generosity is part of what will make possible the next chapter of Amy鈥檚 life. 鈥淚 know how independent she is, I know how smart she is and I know her drive,鈥 Claire says. 鈥淚f this accident didn鈥檛 happen, I truly believe she鈥檇 be somewhere taking the world by storm. We just have to figure out how she鈥檚 going to do that in this new world.鈥
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Amy Wert today uses social media to connect with others around the United States who face their own unique challenges related to paralysis and traumatic injuries, just as her mother is now active in Facebook groups for caregivers of spine and traumatic brain injury patients. It鈥檚 not a large community, but it鈥檚 one where both women offer encouragement and wisdom based on their own experiences.
That starts with a simple acknowledgment of someone鈥檚 existence and value. 鈥淲e avert our eyes when we look at disabled people, because it鈥檚 easy and it鈥檚 not comfortable,鈥 Wert says.

It鈥檚 also possible the mother-daughter duo will be future business partners. The National Association for Law Placement, an organization of more than 2,500 legal career professionals, shared in its 2021 Report on Diversity that only 1.22% of all lawyers identify as living with a disability of any kind, placing Wert in rare company as someone who may more easily identify with clients facing obstacles to living independent lives.
Amy and Claire Wert have had more than one conversation about a joint venture, though they have yet to formalize plans. 鈥淏etween her knowledge of the law, and my knowledge of the insurance industry, and the fight that I had to go through to get her some equipment,鈥 Claire pauses. 鈥淎nd the denials? And the appeals? Regular people, I truly believe, would say 鈥極K, the insurance isn鈥檛 covering it.鈥 But you have to fight!鈥
Hart, Amy Wert鈥檚 partner in the Intramural Moot Court Competition, is sure that her classmate will be ready for those fights. 鈥淪he鈥檚 capable of doing whatever she wants,鈥 says Hart, who today practices family law in North Carolina. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 the path she wants to go down, she鈥檒l give it her all, and she鈥檒l find a way to relate to any client.鈥
Then there鈥檚 her advocacy, which happens right from her phone. In Pennsylvania, Wert had a closeup view of the campaign for the U.S. Senate between Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz. Fetterman was hospitalized in May 2022 following an ischemic stroke, and the question of his health and recovery haunted him through his eventual victory and beyond.
鈥淚f I鈥檓 stuck in this situation, I鈥檓 going to make the most of it.鈥
Perhaps it shouldn鈥檛 have been a surprise, Wert tells me a week after the elections, but what sticks with her were those on Twitter who showed no interest in learning about stroke recovery. To certain partisans and select media personalities, Fetterman was 鈥渢he 鈥榬鈥 word鈥 or 鈥渋ntellectually disabled.鈥 Soon enough, others with disabilities were being dragged through the digital mud. Wert was having none of it.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to be honest. Every single time one of those people said something like he was 鈥榖rain damaged鈥 or 鈥榤entally handicapped,鈥 I reported them,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you comment on someone based on a disability in a negative way, it鈥檚 against Twitter policies. Some of those accounts got blocked.鈥
Confronting critics on social media. Researching policies and laws that affect those with physical or intellectual limitations. Networking with others in similar situations and sharing legal information for those with limited means. It鈥檚 easy to see what might come next for Amy Wert.
Before we end our final call, I cite the very first conversation we had by phone over the summer. Does she stand by her belief that things don鈥檛 happen for a reason? 鈥淣othing鈥檚 changed about that,鈥 Wert says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 appreciate it when people say this was meant to happen. It didn鈥檛 have to happen. It sucks that it did!
鈥淏ut if I鈥檓 stuck in this situation, I鈥檓 going to make the most of it.鈥