When a claim is evaluated, insurers focus on documentation that makes liability and injuries easy to connect. If your bite happened in San Dimas, consider gathering (or requesting) the following:
1) Medical documentation that tells a complete story
Keep records from urgent care/ER visits, follow-up appointments, prescriptions, wound care instructions, and any imaging. For bite injuries, insurers pay close attention to whether treatment was consistent and whether infection or scarring risks were documented.
2) Early photos and measurements
If you took photos shortly after the incident—especially showing bite marks, swelling, bruising, or bandaging—preserve them. If you didn’t, your medical records can still help, but early visuals often make the case stronger.
3) A clean timeline (especially if the incident happened during commuting hours)
San Dimas residents often experience dog bite incidents around busy times—school drop-off, after-work walks, or deliveries. Write down:
- date/time
- location type (residential property, sidewalk, park area, etc.)
- weather/visibility
- what you were doing right before the bite
- whether you were approached calmly or unexpectedly
4) Witnesses from the neighborhood or nearby businesses
Even one neighbor or bystander can clarify whether the dog was leashed, whether warnings were given, and whether the owner had reasonable control.
5) Any “prior notice” evidence
If the owner knew (or should have known) the dog had aggressive tendencies, that can be critical. Examples include prior complaints, reports to property management, animal control documentation, or statements from others who had observed concerning behavior.