Right after you’re hit, focus on safety and documentation. The legal outcome often turns on what gets preserved early.
- Get medical care promptly, even if you feel “mostly okay.” Concussions, soft-tissue injuries, and back/neck problems can show up later.
- Report the crash and make sure the incident is documented. If it’s a hit-and-run, the report becomes even more important.
- Record details while they’re fresh: exact location (nearest intersection/landmark), direction you were walking, weather/lighting, and anything unusual (construction activity, blocked sightlines, sudden stops).
- Collect witness information. In suburban areas, people often leave quickly—ask for names and contact info immediately.
- Take photos if you can: vehicle position, crosswalk/turning path, skid marks, signage, and any visible injuries.
If you’re wondering whether an AI pedestrian accident guide can help you “organize facts fast,” it can be useful for drafting a timeline and checklist—but it can’t replace the evidence work that a lawyer typically needs to do to confirm liability and damages in a real Windsor case.


