Blythe is a highway-and-commute area. Many crashes involve high-speed impacts, long stretches of roadway, and vehicles that may have been in service for years. In that environment, airbag problems often surface in familiar ways:
- Airbag failed to deploy despite a collision that should have triggered restraint activation.
- Airbag deployed, but injuries were still severe—for example, facial, neck, or burn-type injuries that appear inconsistent with what a properly functioning airbag is designed to reduce.
- A later discovery after repair: the vehicle was returned “fixed,” but paperwork shows replacement of airbag components that suggests a malfunction was involved.
- Recall-related confusion: a driver learns about a safety campaign only after the crash, or after the vehicle is inspected.
Even if you’re not sure whether the airbag caused the harm, the safest move is to get evaluated and start preserving the information that will help a lawyer connect the dots.


