If you were struck while walking, your first priority is medical care. Next, focus on evidence and records—because insurance companies often move quickly, and in New York, deadlines and missing documentation can hurt your ability to recover.
Do these steps as soon as you can:
- Get treated immediately (urgent care, ER, or follow-up visits). Even if pain seems minor at first, seek evaluation.
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh: the weather, lighting, traffic signals, what the driver was doing, and your exact route.
- Collect scene details: crosswalk position, lane markings, signage, and whether construction or parked vehicles affected sightlines.
- Identify witnesses near the intersection or storefronts—people often stop to help and then disappear.
- Request video quickly if available (dash cams, nearby business cameras, or traffic footage when appropriate).
If you’re wondering whether an AI tool can help you organize this information, it can—by prompting you to gather facts and summarize your timeline. But it can’t replace the on-the-ground work a lawyer does to connect the crash facts, the medical record, and the legal standards under New York law.


