Fountain is a commuter community. That means many catastrophic injury claims begin with high-speed impacts, sudden braking, lane changes, and complex fault theories—especially when multiple vehicles are involved or when road conditions (traffic signals, lane merges, weather, or construction zones) are part of the story.
In the first days after a serious injury, the evidence that tends to matter most includes:
- Crash documentation: police report number, incident details, diagrams, and citations (if issued)
- Medical intake records: ER notes, imaging results, discharge summaries, and specialist follow-ups
- Photos and videos you can still access: vehicle positions, visible injuries, roadway conditions
- Witness information: names and contact details (including people who saw the crash from nearby businesses or vehicles)
- Work and schedule proof: time missed, restrictions given by doctors, and employer communications
A key local reality: in the weeks following a crash, footage and details can disappear—dashcam files get overwritten, witnesses move on, and documentation gets buried under appointments. Your attorney can move quickly to preserve and organize what insurance companies will later challenge.


