Newark traffic moves fast—especially around commuter corridors, busier intersections, and routes where stop-and-go driving is common. That matters because the event data and the restraint system behavior must match the crash conditions.
Common Newark scenarios we see include:
- Low-speed impacts with serious symptoms: The crash may look minor on scene reports, but the injury pattern (burns, facial trauma, hearing issues) raises questions about restraint performance.
- Rear-end collisions and sudden braking: If the airbag didn’t deploy when it should have, or deployed unexpectedly, the case often turns on what the vehicle sensed and when.
- Multi-vehicle incidents: Defendants may try to shift blame to other drivers. A product-focused approach keeps attention on the airbag system’s role in the injury.
In these situations, your priority is medical care. Your next priority should be preserving evidence that shows how the airbag system behaved during your specific collision—not just what the vehicle “should” have done.


