Every case gets built as though a jury will eventually see it. That is the working promise behind Jacobson Law, the Bohemia firm that markets itself on Long Island as Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers, and it shapes the whole pitch: prepare for trial from day one, and settlement talks tend to go better when the other side believes you are ready to go the distance. Whether a firm actually lives up to that is hard to judge from a website, but the framing is a deliberate one and it tells you the kind of work they are chasing.
Trial-ready approach to injury cases
The practice sits at the heavier end of personal injury. This is catastrophic-injury and wrongful-death territory: traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, amputations, and the claims families bring after a fatal accident. Around that core runs a wide set of practice areas, including motor vehicle crashes covering cars, trucks, motorcycles and rideshare, premises liability and slip-and-fall, construction accidents, dog bites, negligent security, and medical malpractice. The client picture they describe is specific too, with construction workers and first responders named alongside the more general accident victims. It reads like a firm that knows which cases it wants to be hired for.
Practice areas and client types
Geography is central to the brand. The attorneys present themselves as lifelong Long Island residents, and the site covers Suffolk and Nassau counties plus New York City. That local claim is backed up by the structure of the pages, which include location and topic landing pages such as a Long Island Truck Accident Lawyer page and a Bohemia Construction Accident Lawyer page. Some of that is clearly built for search visibility, and I found the granularity a little repetitive to click through, but the underlying message is coherent: injuries that happened on Long Island, handled by people who say they grew up there.
Local presence across Long Island and New York City
On the supporting material, Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers keeps an About page and a Testimonials page. The testimonials are worth naming for what they are, which is self-published praise collected by the firm rather than independent verification. They are useful for tone and for sample outcomes, and less useful as proof, and any reader should weigh them accordingly. Free consultations are offered, which is standard for contingency-fee injury work and lowers the cost of simply calling to ask whether a case is worth pursuing.
Testimonials and free consultations
Reaching Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers is straightforward, which counts for something in a field where fly-by-night operators are a real hazard. Three offices are listed with full street addresses and direct phone lines: a Suffolk County office in Bohemia, a Nassau County office in Garden City, and a Manhattan location available by appointment. There is a proper contact page as well. That physical footprint, two staffed offices plus an appointment-only city presence, is more than a single mailing address dressed up to look established, and it makes the Long Island claim easier to believe.
Three staffed offices with direct contact information
Outside validation is where the case gets weaker. Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers has a Yelp listing under the Jacobson Law name in Bohemia, filed across categories like medical malpractice, car accident, and civil litigation, but no star rating or review count showed up in a search. A MapQuest entry exists without a visible rating. The Facebook page has 493 likes and posts blog content on subjects such as pedestrian accident injuries, which shows the firm is at least maintaining an active channel, though a like count says little about legal quality. Google, the BBB, and Trustpilot turned up nothing usable either, so anyone doing due diligence will need to lean on direct references and possibly public court records instead of a tidy review score.
Limited independent verification online
That gap is the honest weak point here. A firm that trumpets a trial-ready posture invites the obvious follow-up question of what its verdicts and settlements look like, and a self-run testimonials page does not answer it. None of this points to anything being wrong; plenty of capable litigators show up nowhere on Google or Trustpilot, and injury clients often arrive by referral rather than by star rating. It does mean the confidence a visitor can take from the site alone has a ceiling.
Weighed as a whole, Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers comes across as a focused, locally rooted injury firm that is transparent about where it works and how to reach it, and vague only where nearly every law firm is vague, namely on independently measured results. For someone with a serious Long Island injury or a wrongful-death matter, it is a credible name to call.
Against a large regional advertiser like Cellino Law, which blankets New York television and carries a heavy public review trail, the two firms make different trades: Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers offers a smaller, area-specific practice with named local offices but far less outside verification, while a firm like Cellino brings volume and visibility but less of that hometown framing. On the published record alone, the case for Long Island Personal Injury Lawyers rests on the specificity of its practice and the concreteness of its offices, not on any outside proof of results, and that is the honest limit of what this review can tell.

Important pages
Business address
Jacobson Law
640 Johnson Ave., Suite 203,
Bohemia,
NY
11716
United States
Contact details
Phone: 631-661-2030