In the moments after a crash, people often think their only job is “getting medical help.” That matters—but so does building a record before it disappears.
In Airmont, hit-and-run incidents often involve:
- vehicles leaving quickly after contact in congested travel areas,
- limited identifying info (partial plates, vehicle description only), and
- nearby cameras that may retain footage for a short window.
Here’s what to prioritize right away:
- Get medical care immediately (and follow the treatment plan). Delayed evaluation can complicate how insurers argue causation.
- Call the police and request a report if one wasn’t made at the scene. Keep the report number.
- Write down details while they’re fresh: direction of travel, approximate time, lighting/weather, any plate fragments, and what the driver’s vehicle looked like.
- Identify possible camera sources in the area (business entrances, nearby traffic-surveillance coverage, and other surveillance that may not be obvious).
If you’re wondering whether you should “wait to see” if the driver is found—don’t. In hit-and-run cases, missing the evidence window can hurt later negotiations.


