In Houston, many cases begin with a frustrating pattern: the crash seems severe enough that an airbag should have deployed, yet it didn’t—or it deployed in a way that contributed to additional injury.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Airbag fails to deploy despite a collision severe enough to trigger restraint systems.
- Delayed or unexpected deployment where the timing appears inconsistent with the crash.
- Injury linked to deployment forces, where medical records suggest harm consistent with an abnormal restraint event.
- Repairs that don’t resolve the problem, where the vehicle is returned to service but the underlying safety failure remains documented.
If you’re dealing with symptoms like facial trauma, burns, hearing problems, neck injuries, or ongoing pain after the crash, it’s important to preserve your medical timeline and vehicle documentation. In product-injury cases, what’s documented early often matters later.


