Residents around Kendallville often describe restraint problems that sound similar—because the same seatbelt systems can fail in predictable ways when stressed in real-world crashes. If any of the following happened, it may be worth a legal review:
- The belt wouldn’t lock during a sudden stop or collision, leaving extra movement inside the vehicle.
- The belt retracted poorly after the impact, causing slack or unusual belt position.
- The belt locked too aggressively or unpredictably, creating abnormal loading on the body.
- The restraint malfunctioned during a tow/repair transition, when the vehicle was examined but details weren’t documented properly.
- A recall-related question comes up later (for your model or component), and you’re unsure whether it affects your incident.
These issues are often central to the dispute: insurers may argue the crash alone caused the injuries. Your claim needs a clear, technical connection between restraint performance and the harm you suffered.


