Waverly residents often drive for work, school, errands, and healthcare appointments—sometimes on tight schedules and familiar routes. That familiarity can cut both ways: it may make it easier for people to assume what happened, even when the evidence tells a different story.
In the weeks after a crash, we commonly see issues like:
- Conflicting recollections from nearby traffic and witnesses who arrived after the impact
- Delayed injury reporting because symptoms show up later (common after head and soft-tissue trauma)
- Vehicle changes—towing, repairs, or parts being replaced before photos and inspection notes are saved
- Insurance pressure to “wrap it up” before you have a full medical picture
When an impaired driver is involved, these problems can magnify. The early record (police documentation, testing details, scene observations) can heavily influence what insurers accept.


