Fairview Park residents often drive familiar routes—commutes that include stop-and-go traffic, short merging distances, and sudden braking when vehicles change lanes. In these situations, it’s common for:
- People to report that the crash “should’ve triggered airbags,” but they didn’t deploy.
- Injuries to appear in ways that don’t match what a properly functioning restraint system typically produces.
- Damage that looks moderate from the outside to still lead to serious restraint-related harm.
Those details matter because the legal question isn’t “who was at fault” in a broad sense—it’s whether the vehicle’s airbag system behaved differently than it should have, and whether that behavior aligns with the injuries documented by Ohio medical providers.


