Pedestrian accident proof that helps explain the full injury
Pedestrian accidents often involve serious injuries and disputed versions of events. The claim file should show where the person was walking, what the driver was doing, whether a crosswalk or signal was involved, and how the impact changed the injured person’s health, independence, work, and daily routine.
Location evidence is central. Photograph crosswalk markings, pedestrian signals, countdown timers, lighting, lane configuration, turning lanes, parking lots, driveways, bus stops, sidewalks, construction zones, vegetation, and signs that may affect sight lines. If the crash happened at night, return at a similar time when safe to document lighting and visibility.
Witness and video evidence can disappear quickly. Write down the names of nearby businesses, apartment complexes, gas stations, transit stops, schools, or traffic cameras that may have captured the impact or the moments before it. If police responded, keep the report number, officer information, and any supplemental exchange documents.
Medical records should be organized from first response through follow-up care. Pedestrian impacts may cause fractures, head trauma, spinal injuries, soft-tissue injuries, internal injuries, scars, or psychological effects. Preserve ambulance records, emergency care, imaging, surgery consults, physical therapy, prescriptions, mobility-aid receipts, and provider restrictions.
The injured person’s daily-life record can be just as important as the crash report. Keep notes about stairs, bathing, driving, childcare, grocery shopping, sleep, anxiety near traffic, missed work, school interruptions, and help from family. These details help explain how an injury changed life outside the medical chart.
Insurance coverage may involve the driver’s policy, the injured person’s own coverage, a rideshare or delivery policy, or another responsible party depending on the facts. Keep every adjuster communication, claim number, medical-bill notice, and settlement letter. Do not sign a release until the injury timeline and available coverage are understood.
Pedestrian claims can be sensitive because insurers may argue about where the person was walking or whether the driver could avoid the impact. Objective evidence, prompt treatment, consistent records, and preserved scene details help move the discussion away from speculation and toward documented facts.
Records that help clarify the claim
- Photos of crosswalks, signals, lighting, turn lanes, sidewalks, and sight lines.
- Witness names, police report number, and nearby camera or business locations.
- Ambulance, emergency, imaging, surgery, therapy, and follow-up records.
- Receipts for mobility aids, prescriptions, transportation, and home help.
- Employer or school records showing missed time or reduced activity.
- Insurance letters, claim numbers, and all settlement communications.
Lazzara Law Firm can help connect the location evidence, medical record, and insurance coverage so the claim reflects both the collision and the recovery that followed.