Your next steps can affect whether your case is clear—or whether it becomes a guessing game.
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Get medical care right away (even if you think the injury is minor)
- In New Jersey, documentation of symptoms and treatment timing is critical. Delays can give insurers an opening to argue the injuries weren’t caused by the crash.
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Call the police and request a report number
- A police report helps anchor your timeline. If the other driver fled, that report often becomes the starting point for insurance and later legal steps.
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Collect what you can before it’s gone
- In Burlington, impacts may happen near busy intersections, commuter corridors, or residential streets where cameras may be overwritten quickly.
- If you’re able, note the direction of travel, a vehicle description, and anything distinctive (damage pattern, color, plate fragments).
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Avoid recorded statements without legal guidance
- Insurance adjusters may ask for details while the facts are still forming. In hit-and-run cases, an unclear answer can be used to cast doubt later.
If you’re overwhelmed, that’s normal. The key is to get safe, get documented, and then get strategic.


