Seatbelt cases aren’t only about “what happened in the accident.” They often hinge on how the restraint performed—whether it locked, how it fed out slack, whether it jammed, or whether a component behaved abnormally during the collision.
In real Plantation incidents—especially those involving vehicle towing, quick repairs, or multiple vehicles at the scene—two things can go wrong fast:
- The vehicle gets fixed before anyone documents restraint performance. Even if the seatbelt is replaced, records of the failure mode may still exist.
- The story becomes inconsistent. When you’re dealing with pain, paperwork, and follow-up medical visits, early statements to insurers can unintentionally narrow what later experts can prove.
That’s why our approach starts with evidence preservation and a disciplined case timeline, not generic checklists.


