New Braunfels residents and visitors often experience road conditions that can complicate crash investigations: traffic flow changes around peak hours, sudden braking on familiar commuting corridors, and the mix of local drivers and out-of-town vehicles during busy seasons.
In restraint cases, the key issue isn’t just the impact—it’s how the seatbelt system behaved during the collision. Some common restraint failure patterns we see in injury investigations include:
- The belt didn’t lock when it should have
- Excess slack allowed more occupant movement than expected
- A retractor mechanism that jammed or malfunctioned
- Belt hardware damage or misalignment suggesting a component-level problem
- Symptoms that appear later because the restraint didn’t perform as intended
If you can recall even small details—belt behavior, whether you felt slack, whether the belt tightened late, or whether something felt “off”—those observations can help guide what to request and what to preserve.


