What you do right after a crash can strongly affect how your case is understood later.
- Check for injuries first and call for medical help if there’s any pain, dizziness, bleeding, or suspected head/neck trauma.
- Request a police report if officers respond or if it’s appropriate for the situation. For many Pennsylvania claims, the report becomes a baseline reference for the timeline.
- Document the scene: crosswalk or intersection details, traffic-control signs, lighting conditions, weather, and where you were standing before impact.
- Get witness contact info when possible—especially people who were waiting at nearby stops or coming out of nearby businesses.
- Avoid recorded or written statements to insurance adjusters until you’ve spoken with counsel. Adjusters may ask questions that sound harmless but can later be used to limit liability.
If you’re looking for “AI-style guidance,” that can help you organize facts—but it can’t replace the decisions that matter most: evidence preservation, Pennsylvania deadline awareness, and how your story is framed.


