After a crash, your safety comes first. But once you’re stable, the next steps can determine whether your claim is supported by records—or left to guesswork.
Do these quickly, if you can:
- Call police and request an incident report (a report number is critical for follow-up with insurers and any court filings).
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh: direction of travel, vehicle color, make/model clues, partial plate digits, and the approximate time.
- Document the scene: photos of vehicle damage, your visible injuries, traffic signals/signage, lighting conditions, skid marks, and debris.
- Identify nearby cameras: in Southaven, footage is often tied to businesses, apartment complexes, and traffic-adjacent systems. The faster you flag the location, the better your chances.
- Keep medical paperwork organized from day one—ER discharge notes, follow-up instructions, and symptom logs.
If you’re tempted to “wait and see” because the driver left, don’t. Evidence preservation and timely reporting matter—especially in hit-and-run cases.


