Right after a bicycle crash, your priorities should be practical and time-sensitive:
- Get medical care and insist it’s documented. Even if you “feel okay,” symptoms like concussion effects, soft-tissue injury, or back/neck pain can surface later.
- Save the scene evidence before it disappears. In busy Cicero areas, vehicles move, debris gets cleared, and traffic control changes. Take photos of:
- lane position, curb lines, and where you entered/left the roadway
- signals/signage and lighting conditions
- the other vehicle’s position and visible damage
- road conditions (potholes, debris, construction markings)
- Write down what you remember while it’s still fresh. Include direction of travel, timing (what signal was active), and what the driver did immediately before impact.
- Be careful with insurer statements. If you’re contacted quickly, don’t feel pressured to give a recorded explanation before your injuries are evaluated.
If you’re tempted to use an online “bicycle accident legal chatbot” for quick answers, treat it as a checklist—not legal strategy. The strongest next step is getting your facts organized for a lawyer so you don’t accidentally weaken your claim.


