Cabot’s mix of daily commuting routes, busy intersections, and residential driving habits means hit-and-run incidents often follow familiar patterns. Drivers may leave after minor-looking impacts that still cause real harm—or they may flee because they realize they can’t account for what happened.
What matters for your claim is how quickly your case is “triaged” into evidence and next moves, such as:
- Where the crash occurred (busy intersections, residential streets, or areas with nearby businesses)
- Whether nearby cameras can still be accessed before footage is overwritten
- How quickly your medical record is built to match the timeline of the collision
- Whether the other vehicle can be identified from partial information
The sooner your case is handled with that in mind, the better your chances of overcoming the biggest hit-and-run challenge: proving what happened when the at-fault driver is missing.


