After a hit-and-run, your first priority is safety and medical care. But once you’re stable, your next priority is protecting what can be proven.
In practice, these early actions matter a lot in Hewitt cases:
- Get medical documentation quickly. Delays can give insurers an opening to argue causation.
- Write down the details while they’re fresh: road direction, approximate time, weather/visibility, vehicle color, and anything distinctive (light pattern, bumper style, damage location).
- Identify potential cameras ASAP. In suburban areas, footage may be stored briefly—especially near commercial entrances, apartment communities, and busy corridor intersections.
- Request the police report (and keep the report number). Even if the driver is unknown, the report becomes a key starting point.
- Avoid recorded statements until you understand your options. Insurers often use questions to create inconsistencies.
If you’re tempted to use an “AI” tool to organize what happened, that can help you structure your notes. But it shouldn’t replace a lawyer’s review of evidence, deadlines, and coverage issues that apply in Texas.


