Union traffic patterns create predictable risk points—drivers are often watching the road ahead, merging, and making quick decisions during rush hour or between nearby retail and residential areas. When a driver flees, that normally means:
- Surveillance footage is time-sensitive. Cameras at nearby businesses, gas stations, and public locations may overwrite footage after a short retention period.
- Witnesses can be hard to track later. People who saw a crash on a commute route may go back to their day and forget details.
- Small clues matter more. Paint transfer, a partial plate, or a description of the vehicle body style can become the difference between an unidentified claim and one that can be tied to a responsible party.
Missouri hit-and-run claims aren’t impossible—but they require early organization, targeted evidence requests, and careful handling of insurance communications.


