In the hours after a crash, the choices you make can affect how insurers and adjusters evaluate your claim. Start with this local, practical checklist:
- Get medical care and ask for documentation. Even if you feel “okay,” injuries like concussions, soft-tissue damage, and fractures can show up later.
- Preserve crash-scene proof. In Bell, footage may come from nearby businesses, traffic cameras at major intersections, or vehicles with dash cams. Photograph the roadway, signals, lane markings, and vehicle positions.
- Write down details while they’re fresh. Note the direction you were traveling, what the traffic light or stop sign was doing, where you entered the intersection, and what the other driver did right before the collision.
- Be careful with statements. Don’t volunteer a detailed explanation to an insurer on the spot. Insurers often use recorded statements to challenge fault or minimize damages.
If you’re considering an AI bicycle accident assistant, use it to organize your notes—not to replace legal review. AI can help you format your timeline and checklist, but it can’t confirm evidence or interpret how California law applies to your facts.


