In the days after a crash, the most valuable evidence is often the stuff people assume “will be handled later.” It usually isn’t.
If you can, focus on preserving:
- Crash and scene information: police report number, photographs, witness names, and any notes from responders.
- Vehicle restraint details: the belt webbing condition, retractor behavior (if it was observed), and whether the belt was replaced.
- Repair/inspection paperwork: towing receipts, body shop notes, and any inspection report describing restraint components.
- Medical consistency: visit dates, symptom descriptions, and how clinicians connect injuries to the collision.
Why this matters in Fulton: claims often move through insurance quickly, and early communications can shape how adjusters later frame causation. Getting your facts organized early makes it easier for your lawyer to respond from a position of evidence—not guesswork.


