When you’re injured, your attention should be on medical care—but early actions can strongly influence whether insurance treats your claim seriously.
1) Get evaluated promptly (even if you feel “mostly okay”). Pain and symptoms don’t always appear immediately. A medical visit also creates documentation linking your injuries to the crash.
2) Write down the details while they’re fresh. Include the direction you were walking, where you entered the roadway, vehicle direction of travel, weather/lighting, and any statements you overheard.
3) Preserve scene evidence tied to what local traffic looks like. In Crawfordsville, crashes often happen near intersections and areas with regular pedestrian movement—so note:
- whether there were nearby crosswalks or turn lanes
- traffic signals and whether vehicles appeared to be turning
- any nearby street lighting or glare conditions
- whether the vehicle left the scene (hit-and-run)
4) Don’t give a recorded statement to insurance without legal review. Insurers may ask questions that sound harmless but can later be used to narrow liability or challenge the severity of your injuries.


