A powerful resource in litigation for nearly 50 years, S-E-A is a multi-disciplined forensic engineering, fire investigation and visualization services company specializing in failure analysis. S-E-A's full-time staff consists of licensed/registered professionals who are experts in their respective fields.
S-E-A offers a complete investigative service, including: marine, mechanical, biomechanical, electrical, civil and materials engineering, as well as fire investigation, industrial hygiene services, toxicology, visualization services, and a fully equipped chemical laboratory. These disciplines interact to provide a thorough and independent analysis that will support any subsequent litigation.
S-E-A offers a complete investigative service, including: marine, mechanical, biomechanical, electrical, civil and materials engineering, as well as fire investigation, industrial hygiene services, toxicology, visualization services, and a fully equipped chemical laboratory. These disciplines interact to provide a thorough and independent analysis that will support any subsequent litigation.
Services
At S-E-A our associates are our most valued assets. Our unique investigation services culture encourages the sharing of ideas and recognizes that everyone contributes value. We strive to recruit and retain the brightest people and continually look for talented candidates to satisfy our growing needs.
The 3D laser scanners employed by S-E-A provide investigators with millions upon millions of data points from which everything can be measured--from the angle of a splinter of wood to an entire oak tree. Every second, the scanner captures one million data points with almost pinpoint accuracy. Imagine re-creating an entire fire scene as a 3-D model to be presented to a jury.
The most devastating accidents are often those involving fatalities or injuries. In the emotional aftermath of accidents like these, the facts can be as seriously compromised as the victims. S-E-A's biomechanical engineers have the formal education, training and experience to bridge the gap between engineering and medicine to analyze the effects of applied forces and motion on the human body.
Construction sites continue to be one the most dangerous places to work in the United States.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulates construction activities through a baseline set of safety standards for employers to follow, however, they can be confusing when applying them to the actual work activities on a construction site, or when attempting to determine the responsible parties in the wake of a construction incident.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulates construction activities through a baseline set of safety standards for employers to follow, however, they can be confusing when applying them to the actual work activities on a construction site, or when attempting to determine the responsible parties in the wake of a construction incident.
In our comfort and convenience world, life without electrical power is almost unimaginable. It takes a power outage to remind us just how many of the things we use and take for granted are electrical. Even worse, improper installation or operation of electrical equipment, or the simple failure of a powered product or system to perform as it should, can lead to a dramatic demonstration of how deadly and destructive electricity can be.