After a collision, your priority is safety and medical care—but your next priority is building a record that can still be proven days later. If you’re physically able, do these things before your phone dies or people stop answering:
- Call 911 and request an incident report (even if the crash “seems minor”). The report number becomes a central piece of documentation in Idaho claims.
- Write down what you observed immediately: vehicle color, make/model guess, direction of travel, approximate speed, weather/lighting, and anything distinctive (logo, dent pattern, plate fragments).
- Photograph the scene and your injuries: road conditions, vehicle damage, debris, skid marks, and visible bruising.
- Identify nearby cameras right away: gas stations, convenience stores, and retail areas often have cameras—many overwrite footage quickly.
- Get witness contact information before they leave. In a commuter town like Post Falls, witnesses may be passing through and may not be reachable later.
If you’re wondering whether an “AI hit and run lawyer” or digital checklist can help—you can use tools to organize your notes, but the legal work still requires a licensed attorney’s assessment of what matters for liability and damages under Idaho procedure.


