Right after a crash, it’s easy to focus on pain and paperwork. But for a pedestrian injury case, early actions can strongly affect what an insurer accepts.
In Kerrville, start here:
- Get checked—even if you feel “mostly okay.” Some injuries (like concussion symptoms, soft-tissue damage, or back/neck issues) don’t show up immediately.
- Request the police report / crash documentation and confirm the details are accurate (time, location, lane direction, and whether a crosswalk or turn was involved).
- Capture scene evidence while it’s still there. In Kerrville, visibility can change quickly with lighting and weather; photos of the intersection/curb line, signage, and any debris help preserve what witnesses may later forget.
- Write down your version of events immediately (where you entered the roadway, what you noticed first, and what the driver did right before impact).
- Be careful with recorded statements. Insurance adjusters may ask questions that sound simple but later get used to reduce liability.
If you’re using an AI tool to organize information—fine. Just treat it as a checklist, not a substitute for legal strategy based on Texas rules and the facts of your crash.


