Before you think about statements or settlement offers, take steps that preserve your ability to pursue compensation.
- Get medical care and make it count on paper. Even if you feel “mostly okay,” injuries can show up later. In Alabama, treatment records are often the clearest way to connect the crash to your symptoms.
- Document the scene while it’s still fresh. If safe, photograph: traffic signals, lane markings, curb cuts, debris, potholes, skid marks, and the position of vehicles relative to your bike.
- Write down the traffic details you remember. In Montgomery, timing matters—what light was on, whether a driver was turning left from a dedicated lane, and how close you were when evasive action was taken.
- Avoid over-sharing with insurance. Quick recorded statements can become “evidence” used against you. It’s common for adjusters to look for inconsistencies.
If you want to use AI to stay organized, do it as a supplement: build a checklist of facts and questions for counsel—not as a replacement for legal review.


