After a hit-and-run, many people are dealing with injuries while simultaneously trying to piece together what they remember: the direction the car went, a partial plate, a vehicle color, or a witness who may have already moved on.
In practice, the process often turns on two realities:
- Evidence moves fast. Surveillance systems, private camera recordings, and even dashcam footage can be overwritten or lost quickly.
- Insurance scrutiny increases. When the at-fault driver is unknown, insurers may challenge the basics—what happened, whether your injuries match the crash timeline, and how damages should be valued.
A lawyer’s job is to convert your recollection and available documentation into a clear, evidence-based claim—without you having to guess what matters.


