The first hour after a hit-and-run isn’t about legal theory—it’s about building a trail of evidence that insurance companies and adjusters can’t hand-wave away.
If you can, do these immediately:
- Check on injuries first. If anyone is hurt, call for medical help. Delays can complicate both treatment and claim documentation.
- Report the crash. In Oklahoma, a police report can become one of the most important early documents for establishing what happened.
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh. Include: road name or intersection, direction of travel, time of day, weather/lighting, and the vehicle’s color, make, model, and any partial plate info.
- Photograph the scene and your injuries. If you’re able, capture: vehicle damage, debris, skid marks, traffic-control devices, and visible bruising/cuts.
- Preserve contact info for witnesses. People near busy corridors or retail areas often move quickly—get names and phone numbers before they’re gone.
If you’re wondering whether you should use a digital “AI assistant” first: it can help you organize details for your attorney, but it can’t replace the legal value of timely evidence preservation.


