In the Tomball area, crashes often involve everyday realities—changing lanes, merging traffic, and vehicles entering or exiting neighborhoods. In those moments, seatbelts are supposed to lock, retract properly, and keep occupants in a position that reduces the chance of severe impact.
A defective restraint situation may look different than people expect. You might have experienced:
- Slack that shouldn’t have been present after the crash
- A belt that didn’t lock when it should
- A mechanism that jammed or behaved abnormally
- Signs the restraint deployed or released unpredictably
- Injuries that became clearer after the initial medical visit
Because the injury may not be fully understood right away, early documentation matters. Your medical record should track symptoms and treatment in a way that can later be connected to the crash and the restraint performance.


