In the first 24–72 hours after an alcohol-related collision, your choices can affect what’s provable later. Oshkosh cases often involve fast-moving timelines—police reports are filed, vehicles are repaired, dashcam footage may be overwritten, and witnesses (including those from bars, events, or commuter traffic) may become harder to reach.
Here’s the local-focused priority order:
- Get medical care and follow up: Wisconsin juries and insurers expect documentation. If you feel “mostly okay,” still ask about symptoms that can show up later.
- Write down the crash details while they’re fresh: direction of travel, approximate time, lane position, weather, lighting conditions, and any behavior you observed before impact.
- Preserve evidence quickly: photos of the scene, vehicle damage, and any visible injuries; keep receipts; request the police report number.
- Be careful with statements: adjusters may ask questions that sound routine but can be used to limit liability.
- Get legal review early: especially if the other driver is suspected of impairment or if there are contested facts.


