Many residents here drive short-to-medium distances between neighborhoods, jobs, and school zones, and accidents often involve sudden stops, unexpected lane changes, or limited visibility. Those details matter because airbag systems rely on crash conditions—impact direction, severity, seatbelt use, and sensor readings—to decide whether to deploy.
After a crash, the most important question isn’t just “did the airbag deploy?” It’s whether the airbag acted the way it should have under those conditions. In Goldsboro, your documentation should be especially focused on:
- When the crash occurred (time/date, road conditions, and traffic flow)
- What you observed about deployment (late deployment, no deployment, or unusual deployment)
- What the police/incident report says about impact and vehicle movement
- Whether the vehicle was repaired and what parts were replaced
That local, fact-specific record helps lawyers evaluate whether the restraint system behavior is consistent with a defect.


