Hanover Park commuters often face the same scenario: a warning light flickers, braking or steering feels “off,” or an electrical system acts unpredictably—then, suddenly, the vehicle behaves like it’s unsafe. When that happens near high-traffic corridors or during roadway slowdowns, the incident may be investigated like a typical crash.
But defective auto part cases aren’t only about “what happened in the moment.” They’re about whether a product was unreasonably unsafe in the way it was designed, manufactured, or warned about—and whether that failure played a real role in causing the harm.
Insurers frequently try to redirect the story toward:
- alleged maintenance issues
- driver error arguments
- “normal wear” explanations
- timing disputes (especially when repairs were done quickly)
A defect-focused investigation helps keep the case grounded in what can be proven—rather than what sounds plausible.


