Many people think seatbelt cases are only about “did the belt hold?” In practice, restraint issues can look different after a collision—especially when vehicles are navigating stop-and-go traffic, steep grades, or sudden winter braking.
Common restraint failure patterns we investigate include:
- Failure to lock when it should have (leaving extra occupant movement)
- Unusual slack or retractor behavior that changes how forces load the body
- Jammed webbing or belt routing problems that prevent normal restraint use
- Unexpected deployment behavior tied to the restraint mechanism
- Damage or improper operation connected to the belt assembly, retractor, or anchorage hardware
Your case may also involve timing issues—some injuries become clear only after emergency care, follow-up visits, or imaging.


