In the first hours after a crash, people often realize something is wrong in one of these ways:
- The airbag didn’t deploy even though the collision seemed severe.
- The airbag deployed unexpectedly or deployed in a way that didn’t match the forces involved.
- The airbag deployed but caused additional harm—such as facial/head injuries, burns, or other restraint-related trauma.
- A repair shop later notes replaced restraint components (airbag modules, sensors, inflator parts) connected to the event.
Because Hermitage families often handle repairs, work schedules, and follow-up medical visits quickly, the risk is not just the injury—it’s losing key evidence while everyone moves on.


