In and around Bel Air, accident scenes can move fast: traffic reroutes, vehicles get towed, and surveillance footage may be overwritten or lost. At the same time, catastrophic injuries often evolve—new symptoms can appear after the initial emergency visit, and specialists may identify issues that weren’t obvious right away.
Because of that, many serious cases hinge on whether key records are obtained early and organized clearly. The most persuasive files typically include:
- Emergency and hospital records from the first days after the incident
- Imaging and specialist follow-ups (neurology, orthopedics, burn care, rehab)
- Any incident documentation tied to the location (work orders, safety reports, premises logs)
- Proof of expenses tied to mobility, home adjustments, transportation, and caregiver needs
If you’re trying to use a tool to “figure out what to gather,” treat it as a checklist—not as a substitute for a lawyer reviewing what matters for settlement leverage.


