Troy residents often drive the same corridors for work, school, and errands. That means crashes can involve stop-and-go traffic, sudden braking, lane changes, and intersections—all conditions where people may notice something “off” with a seatbelt after the impact.
In restraint-failure cases, details matter: whether the belt held slack, whether it locked late, whether it tightened at the wrong time, or whether the belt mechanism malfunctioned. Those observations can be critical when we’re trying to connect your injuries to a restraint performance problem.


