Hit-and-run cases often hinge on what happens in the first hours. If you’re physically able, start with the basics that are most likely to be available around Spokane locations:
- Photograph the scene quickly: road conditions (slippery spots, snowbanks, glare), traffic signals, crosswalk markings, and where you were standing or walking.
- Capture nearby “retention risk”: in Spokane, dashcam and business surveillance systems may overwrite footage quickly—especially along high-traffic corridors.
- Write down partial identifiers: even if you only remember a color, vehicle make/model traits, or partial plate digits, those details matter.
- Get witness contact info: people near Spokane River trails, downtown sidewalks, and retail parking areas may be willing to help—if you ask right away.
Then—before you give recorded statements—pause. Insurance questions can unintentionally create contradictions (especially about timing, speed, or where you were relative to the lane/crosswalk). In Spokane hit-and-run matters, those details can become the insurer’s main leverage.


