Right after a pedestrian accident, the most important actions often aren’t legal—they’re evidence-and-health actions that make later decisions easier.
- Get medical care even if you feel “mostly okay.” In many pedestrian cases, symptoms show up later—especially with head injuries, neck/back strain, and soft-tissue trauma.
- Report and document the scene while details are fresh. If possible, note traffic signals, crosswalk location, lighting conditions, weather, and what direction you and the vehicle were traveling.
- Preserve witness information. Jasper neighborhoods and commercial areas can have witnesses who saw the incident but don’t stick around. Names and contact info matter.
- Keep every record organized. Medical paperwork, work schedules, prescriptions, ride/transportation receipts, and any instructions from providers can shape your claim.
- Be careful with statements to insurance. What you say early can be repeated later in a way that doesn’t match your intent.
If you’re trying to use technology to get clarity quickly, that can help you organize facts—but it can’t replace the value of a lawyer who understands how liability disputes and evidence challenges play out under Indiana practice.


