Right after a pedestrian accident—whether it happened near a busy intersection, by a school route, or along a roadway with limited lighting—your actions can strongly affect your case.
Focus on these priorities first:
- Get medical care promptly (even if you think you’re “okay”). Alabama claims often depend on medical documentation tying injuries to the crash.
- Preserve the scene evidence if it’s safe to do so: vehicle position, crosswalk/turn lane location, lighting conditions, and any visible debris.
- Write down what you remember before the details fade—direction of travel, how the driver approached, and whether there was a pedestrian signal.
- Collect witness contact info. In Alabaster, many crashes involve people who stop briefly and then leave; capture their information immediately.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance until you’ve discussed your situation with counsel.
If you’ve been searching for an “AI pedestrian accident lawyer” for quick answers, treat that as education—not strategy. The decisions you make early (medical timing, what you say, what you document) are where cases are won or lost.


