After a serious wreck, people often feel pressured—by pain, by family responsibilities, and by insurance adjusters moving quickly. In Herriman, we commonly see these problems:
- Recorded statements taken too soon. Even when you’re trying to be cooperative, early comments can be used later to argue your symptoms were mild, delayed, or unrelated.
- Medical care delayed or discontinued. For catastrophic injuries, consistency matters. Gaps can complicate how doctors describe causation and prognosis.
- Missing evidence from commuter roads. Dashcam footage, traffic camera recordings, and nearby surveillance can disappear. Cell phone location data can also be overwritten.
- Underestimating future needs. When injuries involve neuro trauma, mobility loss, or long-term therapy, the “current” bills are rarely the full picture.
If you’re wondering whether you should “wait until you feel better,” the better approach is to secure evidence and get medical documentation immediately, then let your legal team build the claim around verified facts.


