If you’re able, your next actions can make or break your ability to recover compensation—particularly when surveillance footage and witness recollections fade quickly.
- Call 911 and ask for a crash report. A police report number matters in Minnesota when you’re dealing with insurers and uninsured/unknown-driver coverage.
- Write down what you remember before you talk to anyone. Vehicle color, make/model (if known), approximate speed, direction of travel, and anything distinctive (lights, damage pattern, panel type).
- Check for nearby cameras. In Champlin, footage may exist from nearby retail properties, apartment entrances, gas stations, and traffic-adjacent systems. If you know the general intersection/roadway, we can help identify likely sources to request before it’s overwritten.
- Get medical care even if you feel “okay.” Adrenaline can mask symptoms. Medical documentation also helps establish that your injuries are connected to the crash.
If you’re thinking about using an “AI” tool to organize what happened, that can be helpful for keeping details straight—but it shouldn’t replace the legal work of preserving evidence and building a Minnesota-ready claim.


