In the first hours after a crash, your priorities should be safety and documentation—not “winning” the argument.
1) Get medical care and follow up. Delaware injury claims usually rise or fall on the medical record. Even if you felt okay at first, symptoms (concussion, soft-tissue injury, nerve pain) can show up later.
2) Preserve crash evidence while it’s still there. Newark traffic moves fast—dash cam footage may overwrite, debris gets cleared, and witnesses leave. Capture:
- Photos of the roadway, lane markings, signage, and any signals
- Photos of your bicycle and the other vehicle’s visible damage
- A note of weather/lighting and how the intersection or roadway was operating
3) Be cautious with recorded statements. Insurance adjusters may ask questions that sound routine but can create problems later—especially if your answers don’t match the timeline supported by treatment records.
If you’re looking at an AI bicycle accident checklist or virtual bicycle accident consultation, use it to organize facts—not to replace legal review.


