Before you worry about legal strategy, focus on stabilization and documentation. In California, evidence can disappear quickly—surveillance systems are overwritten, incident logs get “cleaned up,” and maintenance vendors may move to close the loop.
Here’s a practical Blythe-focused checklist:
- Get medical care promptly (even if you think it’s “not that bad”). Keep every discharge note, after-visit summary, and imaging report.
- Write down the incident while it’s fresh: the exact location (mall/clinic/workplace area), what the device did, what you were doing, and what you felt.
- Record names: the staff member who made the report, any security contact, and any witnesses.
- Request the incident report number (if one was created). If you’re told it will be “handled,” ask how you can obtain a copy.
- Preserve your communications: texts/emails with building staff, insurance contacts, or anyone who asked you to “sign something” or “confirm details.”
If you’ve already missed part of this window, don’t panic—an attorney can still help recover records and build a timeline.


