Right after a collision, the biggest risk is losing evidence before it’s documented—particularly in suburban areas where details fade quickly and vehicles are moved.
Consider these steps:
- Seek medical care even if you feel “mostly okay.” Some injuries show up later. Wisconsin injury documentation often relies on early medical notes to connect symptoms to the crash.
- Report the crash promptly (if police were not already called). A consistent record helps when fault is disputed.
- Preserve scene details: take photos of the crosswalk or intersection, traffic signals, lighting conditions, skid marks, and where you were standing.
- Collect witness information before people leave. In Mequon, witnesses may be commuting or shopping and may be hard to reach later.
- Get the other driver’s information if you can. If it’s a hit-and-run, ask law enforcement about what they can obtain from traffic cameras.
If you’re wondering whether an “AI pedestrian accident lawyer” can help you organize this, AI can be a helpful note-taking or question-drafting tool—but it can’t replace the evidence-gathering and legal analysis needed to deal with Wisconsin insurers.


