Easton has a mix of street traffic patterns: shorter gaps between businesses, more frequent crosswalk activity, and roadways where surveillance coverage is uneven. That matters because hit-and-run claims often hinge on whether you can quickly locate and preserve video and other records.
Common Easton scenarios we see include:
- Vehicles leaving after a sideswipe or lane-change impact near commercial areas or commuter traffic flows
- Fender-bender injuries that escalate later—especially when the other driver assumes it’s “no big deal”
- Pedestrian or bicycle collisions where the victim is disoriented and identification information is limited
- Parking lot departures where witnesses are present briefly, but contact information is lost
When the driver flees, the clock starts immediately. Evidence can disappear fast if surveillance footage is overwritten or if witnesses move on.


