In the hours after a crash, the goal is simple: protect your health and protect the facts.
- Get medical care promptly (even if symptoms seem minor). Some injuries—like soft tissue strains, concussion symptoms, or back pain—may show up later.
- Write down your incident timeline while it’s fresh: where you were (inside the vehicle, at the curb, crossing nearby), what the driver was doing, and what the traffic conditions were like.
- Save rideshare details: trip status, approximate time, and any identifying info you can access from the app.
- Capture photos if you can do so safely: roadway layout, lighting, lane positions, and any visible damage.
- Avoid long statements to insurers. In Delaware, what you say can shape how fault is argued.
If you’re looking at “AI lawyer” style tools, use them only as a structured memory aid—to organize what happened and what you have. The claim strategy still needs to be built on real evidence and Delaware-specific legal requirements.


