After a collision, it’s common for the investigation to center on speed, fault, and impact severity. But in seatbelt cases, the legal story has to include how the restraint system behaved during the specific event.
In Clovis, you might encounter practical hurdles that can affect evidence:
- Vehicle repairs happen quickly. After a crash, families often need the car back fast—sometimes before the restraint components are documented.
- Photos and witness memories fade. Even when people stop and help, details like belt slack, whether it locked properly, or whether anyone noticed belt issues can get lost.
- Insurers may steer the narrative to “the crash alone.” Defense teams frequently argue that the injury would have occurred regardless of restraint performance.
Because of these realities, your earliest steps matter. The goal is to preserve the restraint evidence and build a timeline that ties the seatbelt’s behavior to the injuries your doctors documented.


