Your next steps can determine what evidence still exists when investigators and insurers start asking questions.
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Call 911 and ask for an officer to document the crash
- Even if you think the damage is minor, report it. A Georgia police report often becomes the backbone of later proof.
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Write down details while they’re still clear
- Direction of travel, approximate time, vehicle color/size, and anything distinctive (lights, body damage, decals).
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Check for nearby cameras—fast
- In Tucker, footage may exist from apartment/retail security systems, dashcams from other drivers, or cameras near busy intersections. Ask the responding officer what locations tend to have coverage.
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Take photos you can control
- Injuries (as appropriate), vehicle damage from multiple angles, road conditions, and any debris trail.
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Get medical care promptly
- Delayed treatment can create unnecessary disputes later. Your medical records should reflect both symptoms and how they relate to the crash.
If you use a digital “AI” tool to organize your recollection, treat it like a checklist—not a substitute for legal strategy. The goal is to preserve facts that can be verified.


