A seatbelt is designed to reduce motion and limit injury during a collision. When it doesn’t restrain you properly—such as not locking when it should, jamning, deploying/acting unexpectedly, or allowing excessive slack—the question becomes whether the restraint system had a defect or failed to meet safety expectations.
In Alexandria, these cases often come down to details like:
- What the belt did during the impact
- Whether there were abnormal signs of slack, binding, or delayed locking
- Where you were seated and how the belt was positioned
- The type of vehicle and whether the restraint system shows signs of failure
Sometimes the injury symptoms show up later—neck, back, or internal discomfort that becomes clearer after treatment begins. That timing matters, and it’s one reason not to delay documenting what you felt and when.


