Before you worry about claims, focus on the basics:
- Get medical care right away—especially for head injuries, breathing issues, burn injuries, or any incident involving near-drowning.
- Write down what you remember (time of day, weather/lighting, who was present, what the pool area looked like).
- Preserve scene evidence if it’s safe to do so: photos of the deck/surfaces, gates and latches, ladders/handrails, pool signage, and any visible damage.
- Ask for surveillance preservation when it’s a community pool, apartment complex, or HOA-managed amenity. Footage can be overwritten quickly.
In Thornton, many pool incidents occur at properties with shared rules and shared maintenance—so early evidence preservation can be the difference between “it happened” and “we can prove what failed and why.”


