In many South Salt Lake cases, the seatbelt issue isn’t obvious immediately. Some people feel shaken and assume they’re “fine,” then later develop neck pain, back pain, headaches, chest discomfort, or internal injury symptoms. Others notice restraint behavior only after leaving the scene—such as:
- the belt didn’t lock the way it should have during a sudden stop
- abnormal slack before impact
- a retractor that didn’t retract smoothly
- a belt that appeared twisted, stretched, or misaligned
Medical documentation in the days and weeks after the crash can become a key part of showing how the restraint failure relates to your injuries.


