In real Fayetteville cases, the early focus is often on getting stabilized and getting the vehicle repaired or released. That can cause two common problems:
- Vehicle inspection gaps: If the car is repaired quickly without preserving the restraint system parts or inspection results, key evidence can be harder to evaluate later.
- Injury documentation delays: Some injuries related to restraint malfunctions—like facial trauma, hearing issues, or soft-tissue injuries that worsen over days—may not be clearly connected until follow-up visits.
If you suspect an airbag malfunction, the most important step is not debating online—it’s ensuring your medical record and vehicle evidence align with what happened in the crash.


