River Edge is a suburban community where many accidents happen during routine commutes—quick lane changes, stop-and-go traffic, and sudden braking near residential intersections. In those real-world conditions, it’s common for people to assume the airbag “should have gone off” or that it “must have worked” because the car was repaired.
But airbag malfunctions don’t always look obvious at first. Sometimes the airbag fails to deploy despite a collision that appears to meet deployment thresholds. Other times, it deploys and still leaves a pattern of injuries that doesn’t fit what you’d expect from a properly functioning restraint system.
When these mismatches occur, the key question becomes: what did the restraint system actually do, and how does that connect to your medical findings? Getting that connection right early can matter to both negotiations and any later litigation.


