In suburban towns like Roselle, hit-and-run incidents frequently occur in places where cameras are present—but only for a short time. A driver may flee after:
- a sideswipe at higher speeds on the way to work
- a collision in a parking lot connected to local shopping and errands
- a pedestrian or crosswalk incident near where people are walking between destinations
- a crash during evening visibility challenges (headlights, glare, and wet pavement)
When the other vehicle disappears, the case often becomes a race against time:
- surveillance footage gets overwritten
- witnesses become unreachable
- vehicles get repaired or moved
- injury symptoms evolve, but records must still line up with the crash timeline
That’s why the first days after a hit-and-run matter as much as the final settlement.


