Construction accidents in and around Danville aren’t always “caught on camera.” Even when footage exists, it may be overwritten quickly, and key records—like incident logs, safety checklists, or delivery schedules—can disappear if no one requests them.
Early documentation matters because Kentucky insurers often look for inconsistencies between:
- the reported accident timeline,
- the jobsite conditions that day,
- and how your symptoms evolved.
A short delay can create a gap the defense uses to argue the injury wasn’t caused by the site event. The goal isn’t to prove everything immediately—it’s to preserve what you can while it’s still available and accurate.
What to do first (practical steps):
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh (time, location, weather/lighting, who was present, what equipment was moving).
- Photograph anything safe to capture: barricades, signage, floor conditions, ladder/scaffold setup, and traffic control.
- Keep every medical document, note, work restriction, and follow-up appointment.
- Save texts/emails related to the job and any safety complaints you made beforehand.


