Your first priority is safety and medical care. After that, the fastest way to protect your rights is to document the crash while memories are fresh and local footage is still available.
Do this as soon as you can:
- Call 911 and request a crash report (even if you think injuries are minor). A report number is often essential for later insurance and evidence requests.
- Write down details immediately: direction of travel, approximate speed, vehicle color/make/model if known, license plate fragments, and anything distinctive.
- Photograph what’s still there: damage, debris, road conditions, traffic signals/signage, and visible injuries.
- Identify likely nearby cameras: businesses, apartment entry points, gas stations, and nearby intersections can have surveillance that gets overwritten quickly.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurers until you’ve reviewed your options with counsel.
In Alliance, timing matters. If you wait, the very items that help identify the fleeing driver—surveillance clips, witness contact info, and scene details—can become harder to obtain.


