Many seatbelt injury cases begin with a simple question: Did the restraint work the way it was supposed to in the moments that mattered?
After a collision, the evidence often comes down to what happened during the restraint event and how that failure relates to your specific injuries. In practice, that can involve:
- A belt that did not lock when it should have
- A retractor that did not manage slack as designed
- Hardware or anchorage issues that suggest a component problem or improper performance
- Deployment behavior that seems inconsistent with expected restraint operation
Because Colorado Springs accidents frequently involve changing road conditions and vehicle impacts at different angles, the facts of your collision matter. A lawyer can help connect the restraint behavior to the injury pattern documented by medical providers.


