What you do right after a pedestrian crash can heavily influence how your case develops. Before you worry about settlement timelines, focus on documentation and medical continuity.
- Get medical care promptly (even if you think you’re “mostly okay”). Maine injury claims often turn on medical records that show what happened and how symptoms evolved.
- Report the crash and request incident details. If police were called, ask for the report number or other documentation.
- Capture the scene while it’s still fresh. In Saco, that may include crosswalk markings, lighting conditions, weather (fog, rain, glare), and where you were positioned relative to the curb.
- Write down a timeline while you remember it: what you noticed first, when you realized a vehicle was close, and anything that distracted the driver (or affected visibility).
- Be careful with statements. Insurance may ask “just a few questions.” In many cases, one careless sentence can be used to minimize fault or injuries.
If you’re searching for “AI pedestrian accident help” or an “ai legal assistant,” those tools can help you organize a checklist—but they can’t review your medical records, evaluate liability based on the scene, or anticipate Maine-specific dispute patterns.


