After a hit-and-run, your first steps should be about safety and documentation—then evidence preservation.
1) Get medical attention immediately (even if you feel “okay”). Soft-tissue injuries and concussion symptoms can show up later.
2) Call police and request a report. A police report number becomes a key anchor for later insurance and attorney communications.
3) Identify nearby recording sources—right away. In Santaquin, footage is often controlled by private systems (home doorbells, business cameras, traffic cameras at nearby intersections, and vehicles with dashcams). The practical issue is timing: many systems overwrite quickly.
4) Write down what you remember while it’s fresh. Focus on::
- Direction of travel
- Vehicle color, make/model guess, and any distinguishing features
- Approximate speed and lane position
- Road conditions (lighting, weather, glare)
5) Avoid recorded statements until you understand your position. Insurers may ask questions that sound routine but can be used to dispute liability later.
If you’re overwhelmed, you can still start with a structured checklist and then bring that information to a lawyer for legal evaluation—don’t wait for “perfect memory.”


