Many injury claims in this area come from the way people drive and commute—short trips, frequent merges, and stop-and-go traffic that can lead to collisions where restraint systems are supposed to protect occupants.
In practice, airbag cases often turn on details like:
- Whether the crash severity matched the airbag response (e.g., the crash looked like it should have triggered deployment)
- The type of impact (front, offset, or near-offset impacts can affect how sensors interpret crash data)
- What happened immediately after the collision (did the airbag deploy at all, partially, or unusually?)
Those facts matter because product-liability defenses commonly argue that the airbag worked as designed for that specific crash event. In Manassas Park, where many drivers commute through the same regional corridors and shopping/restaurant areas, it’s especially important to preserve documentation early—before memories fade and before the vehicle is fully repaired.


