In Southern New Mexico, many crashes involve long stretches of highway, changing weather, and the kind of sudden impact that can trigger the restraint system—yet still result in an airbag malfunction. You may be dealing with:
- No deployment despite a serious crash: You may have expected the restraint system to fire given the collision severity.
- Late or improper deployment: The airbag fires, but not in a way that matches what the vehicle’s safety system should have done.
- Abnormal injury patterns: Symptoms like facial bruising, burns, or other trauma that don’t seem consistent with a properly functioning airbag.
- Problems discovered after repairs: Sometimes the airbag module, inflator, sensor, or wiring is replaced later, and that repair history becomes critical evidence.
If your vehicle was serviced after the crash, keep every invoice and note—what was replaced and why can matter to your claim.


