In the first hours after a crash, your biggest risk isn’t just injury—it’s losing the proof that supports your version of events.
Here’s what we typically encourage Goshen clients to prioritize:
- Get medical care and make sure your treatment note documents symptoms and how they relate to the crash.
- Report the incident and keep your police report number. (Indiana claims often move faster when documentation is consistent from the start.)
- Capture location-specific details: nearby intersections, the direction you were traveling, and distinctive surroundings (street lighting, construction zones, parking access, or crosswalk visibility).
- Preserve witness information before people go home. In residential and school-area traffic, witnesses may be neighbors who move quickly out of reach.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance until you’ve reviewed your options with counsel. Adjusters may ask questions that sound routine but can later be used to argue the claim is unclear or exaggerated.
If you’re thinking, “I’m not sure what to remember,” that’s normal after a hit-and-run. Your attorney can help you organize what you know so it’s usable.


