In many Raymore incidents, the biggest evidence risk isn’t the accident—it’s what happens immediately afterward.
If you can do so safely, gather what you can before you start calling insurers or trying to track down the other vehicle. In our experience, the most helpful details include:
- Exact location and nearby landmarks (business entrances, intersections, parking-lot layouts)
- Time of day (important for camera retention schedules and witness availability)
- Vehicle description (color, make/model if known, height, panel damage, lights, and any visible plate fragments)
- Direction of travel and where the other vehicle likely turned or accelerated
- Any witnesses who can recall what they saw without being influenced by rumors
Even if you think you’ll remember later, adrenaline and pain make recall unreliable—especially after a crash involving pedestrians, cyclists, or sudden-impact injuries.


