In and around Stillwater, many collisions happen in predictable places and situations—commutes, busy intersections, campus-area traffic, and sudden braking when visibility is limited.
That matters because the way a crash unfolds can influence what gets recorded (and what doesn’t). For example:
- Rear-end and stop-and-go impacts can create restraint-system responses that are later disputed.
- Daytime glare and night driving affect witness accounts and photo clarity.
- Campus and event traffic can lead to delayed reporting, missing surveillance footage, or unclear timeline details.
If you’re wondering whether your airbag issue is “worth pursuing,” the practical answer is: your case often depends on whether the record can support that the airbag malfunction contributed to the injury—not just that an accident occurred.


