If you’re able, your first goal is safety and medical care. The second goal—often just as important—is evidence preservation.
**In Kenmore hit-and-run cases, the clock matters because: **
- Traffic cameras and nearby surveillance may overwrite footage quickly.
- Witnesses may move on or become harder to reach.
- Vehicle damage details and scene conditions can change fast as tow services and cleanup crews arrive.
Here’s what to prioritize:
- Call police immediately and request a case number. Even if the driver is gone, a report helps anchor timelines.
- Document what you can: approximate location, direction of travel, vehicle description (color, make/model if known, distinctive features), and anything you noticed about speed or lane position.
- Record nearby identifiers: which intersection/roadway you were near, whether there were businesses with cameras, and whether there were pedestrians or cyclists who saw the impact.
- Save medical paperwork early. Your treatment timeline and clinician notes become critical in Washington claim handling.
If you’re wondering whether you should “just wait and see” before contacting a lawyer: in hit-and-run situations, waiting can make it harder to connect your injuries to the crash with the strongest documentation.


