In our region, accidents can involve everything from commuters on US-271 to drivers traveling through town for school, work, or errands. Regardless of the route, the early hours after a wreck can determine what evidence survives.
Do these things promptly:
- Get medical care right away (even if you think symptoms are minor). Airbag-related injuries—such as facial trauma, burns, or hearing problems—may not be obvious immediately.
- Request the crash documentation you can. If police were involved, collect the report number and any available incident details.
- Preserve your vehicle information: photos of the dash warning lights, the seat belt condition, visible airbag damage, and any warning labels.
- Keep repair paperwork. If your airbag components were replaced, the invoice and parts description can help show what was changed.
Why this matters: in defective airbag cases, the strongest claims often connect the injury mechanism to how the restraint system behaved during your specific crash.


