In the day or two after the incident, the choices you make can affect how strong your claim is later—especially when insurers argue the injury is minor, unrelated, or “part of the job.”
Focus on three priorities:
- Get medical care and follow-up documentation. Crush injuries can reveal complications after the initial evaluation. Keep every note, imaging result, work restriction form, and discharge instruction.
- Preserve evidence while it’s still available. If you’re able, note the equipment involved, take photos of the scene, and write down what you remember (conditions, sequence of events, who was present).
- Avoid recorded statements or over-explaining to adjusters. Insurance questions are often designed to narrow liability. In Montana, you still want timely action—but you also want your words to be accurate, consistent, and not prematurely damaging.
If you’re wondering whether an “AI assistant” can handle this for you, treat it like a tool for organizing information—not a substitute for legal strategy. A lawyer’s job is to connect the evidence to liability and damages in a way insurers understand.


