Melrose residents often drive the same routes repeatedly—commuting, dropping off kids, and navigating construction and seasonal traffic patterns. In that environment, it’s common for:
- vehicles to be repaired fast to get back on the road,
- seatbelts to be replaced without preserving failed components,
- and early crash documentation to be incomplete.
That’s a problem for restraint defect cases. The “what happened” may be real, but the proof depends on what’s preserved: photos, crash reports, repair invoices, and whether any inspection notes exist.
If you suspect a restraint defect, don’t assume the repair shop’s work file is enough. We help clients identify what records to request and what might still be recoverable—especially when the seatbelt system was replaced.


