In a city like Saginaw—where routine routes can include nearby commercial corridors, school-area traffic, and intersections that see heavy turning movements—hit-and-run evidence can vanish fast. Surveillance systems get overwritten, private cameras don’t always retain footage for long, and witnesses often move on.
A strong case typically depends on building a record while it’s still available:
- locating nearby cameras (gas stations, retail storefronts, apartment complexes, or traffic camera coverage where applicable)
- documenting vehicle damage and scene details while they’re fresh
- tying your medical treatment timeline to the crash you experienced
Waiting too long can make it harder to connect the incident to your injuries—something insurance adjusters will try to exploit.


