In a fast-moving incident, details disappear quickly—dashcam footage gets overwritten, witnesses change their accounts, and medical notes get buried among follow-up visits. In Dripping Springs, that problem is magnified by the way people travel and where accidents tend to occur.
Common examples we see include:
- Commuter and rural-road collisions where conditions (speed, visibility, lane changes) are disputed.
- Intersection crashes where fault hinges on light timing, turning behavior, and witness credibility.
- Incidents during weekends and events when traffic patterns shift and distractions increase.
Early case work matters because catastrophic damages depend on establishing both (1) what happened and (2) what the injury changed permanently.


