In many Ohio hit-and-run cases, the legal difficulty isn’t just that the driver fled—it’s that the “trail” of the crash disappears quickly.
New Albany traffic patterns can make this worse:
- Commute surges can mean nearby cameras get overwritten faster.
- Residential streets and driveways may have fewer public cameras, so neighbors’ footage and dashcams become critical.
- Mixed traffic (vehicles turning into neighborhoods, school-related traffic, and pedestrians nearby) can create confusion about who had the duty to yield.
When the other driver is missing, insurers may push back by claiming the crash couldn’t be tied to your injuries—or that the wrong vehicle was involved. Your job shouldn’t be to guess your way through that. Your job is to get evidence and medical documentation working for you.


