Northport drivers often describe similar patterns once they’re evaluated and the vehicle is inspected. While every crash is different, these are recurring circumstances:
- Rear-end and low-to-moderate speed collisions where the airbag should have deployed but didn’t, or where deployment was inconsistent with the crash severity.
- Side-impact events near busier corridors, where improper sensing can lead to injuries that seem out of proportion to the impact.
- Out-of-state or out-of-area vehicle use (work travel, family travel, or commuting) that brings a known safety issue into an Alabama accident—especially when a recall notice later appears.
- Repairs that “fix the symptom” but not the system, such as replacement of airbag components without a clear explanation of the underlying cause.
If you’re thinking, “I’m not sure the airbag problem is connected to my injuries,” you’re not alone. In Northport, we frequently see that the documentation exists—but it needs to be organized so a lawyer can evaluate causation and liability efficiently.


