Castle Pines is a suburban community where many people commute daily and drive a mix of local roads and highway access. That means crashes often happen at speeds where restraint performance matters—and where the defense may argue the injuries came from impact alone.
In seatbelt-related injury cases, insurers may try to push one of these narratives:
- the restraint behaved “normally” for the crash severity
- the injury was caused by other impacts or occupant positioning
- the seatbelt was damaged later during repair
- the claim can’t be tied to a specific defect
To counter that, a successful case typically requires early evidence preservation and a tight link between:
- what the belt did (or didn’t do)
- what injuries occurred
- what the vehicle records and inspection materials show


