Right after impact, the choices you make can affect everything—medical proof, witness credibility, and how insurers interpret fault.
- Get medical care immediately (urgent care or ER if needed). Even if pain seems minor, pedestrian injuries can worsen over days.
- Report the incident. If police were called, request the incident details. If you weren’t sure whether a report was made, ask.
- Document while it’s still fresh: take photos of vehicle position, crosswalk/curb area, lighting, weather, and any visible injuries.
- Write down names and contact info of bystanders. In a small community, people often move on quickly.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance before you understand what they’re trying to determine.
If you’re wondering whether an AI tool can help you “organize” this information, it can—at best. But in Sleepy Hollow, the strongest claims still depend on medical consistency, scene evidence, and a clear reconstruction of how the driver responded.


