Madison traffic patterns and driving conditions can create situations where people believe the crash “should have triggered” the restraint system—but the results were different. In real cases, the strongest claims aren’t based on suspicion alone; they’re based on what the records show.
Local factors that can affect how evidence is gathered include:
- After-crash vehicle handling (whether the car is towed, stored, or repaired before a full inspection)
- Timing of medical visits (especially when pain appears later)
- Repair-shop documentation (what was replaced, what was diagnosed, and whether the airbag system was tested)
- Recall-related confusion (a recall notice doesn’t automatically prove your specific crash involved the same defect)
A lawyer’s job is to connect the dots between the crash, the restraint system behavior, and your injuries using evidence that can hold up.


