The decisions you make right after a collision can strongly affect what evidence survives and how your claim is evaluated.
- Get medical care promptly (even if you think you’re “just bruised”). Delayed treatment can complicate causation.
- Document what you can while it’s still fresh: where you were crossing, what the traffic signals/signs showed, lighting conditions, and any hazards like debris or poor visibility.
- Request incident details: if police responded, note the report number and responding agency.
- Identify witnesses early—people often move on quickly after an incident near retail areas, transit routes, or intersections.
- Be careful with statements to insurance. What you say can be used to argue your injuries were minor or unrelated.
If you’re weighing an AI pedestrian accident lawyer or a “legal chatbot” approach, treat it as an organization tool—not a substitute for evidence handling and Rhode Island-specific claim strategy.


