Kennett residents often drive a mix of local routes and regional traffic patterns—commutes for work and school, deliveries, and travel to nearby towns. In real life, that means the crash context can be messy: sudden braking, intersection impacts, vehicles struck at varying angles, and sometimes vehicles repaired quickly to get back on the road.
When a seatbelt malfunction is involved, the “what happened” story isn’t enough. Insurers may frame the injury as simply caused by crash forces. Your side generally needs proof that the restraint didn’t perform as designed and that the malfunction affected injury outcomes.
If you’re trying to decide what to do next, the most important thing is preserving what can still be proven—before it disappears.


