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| WHAT TO DO AT THE SCENE OF AN ACCIDENT 
1. STAY AT THE SCENE OF THE ACCIDENT If you car is involved in an accident, don't leave the scene of the accident. If you don't stop after being involved in an accident you may be subject to criminal prosecution. After an impact and collision try not to move your vehicles until the police arrive in order to allow the police to survey the scene and to ensure that all of the evidence regarding how the accident occurred is preserved. If your vehicle is obstructing the flow of traffic, try to move your vehicle the shortest distance possible from the place of impact without obstructing further traffic if you can do so safely. Remain at the scene of the accident and have other who have witnessed the occurrence immediately contact the police. If you are injured, do not exit your vehicle.
When you have been the victim of someone else's lack of care in operating their automobile, it is important that you contact the local police department immediately in order to preserve your rights. - Do not allow the other operator to convince you that this should be "handled among ourselves".
- Calling the police department is especially important step if you feel any pain or injury as a result of the accident.
- Remember, if there is a lawsuit latter on, your counterpart in the accident may have a completely different story when the matter reaches court than the one that he or she tells you at the scene of the accident.
2. SEEK MEDICAL TREATMENT IMMEDIATELY Many people, even when they feel pain, will refuse medical attention at the scene and travel home. Then, after several hours of increasing pain, they will finally go to the hospital and present themselves at the emergency room. When their case reaches court, this delay in seeking medical attention is often used against them as a weapon to prove that the accident did not cause the injury. If you feel pain at an accident scene and an ambulance is offered, utilize the ambulance services to go immediately to the closest emergency room.
3. WHAT TO DO WHEN EXCHANGING IMFORMATION WITH THE OTHER DRIVER
Obtain the following information with the other driver: Name, address, telephone number, driver's license number, name of insurance company, and policy number - Names of passengers, including their address and phone number
- Names of witnesses with address and phone number; and
- Names of the owner, if not the driver, including address, phone number, insurance company, and policy number.
Make notes as to the time of day, weather conditions, road conditions, street lights, and the presence or length of skid marks. Try to make a diagram noting the location of the vehicles, crosswalks, stop signs, and traffic signals. When you exchange information with the other driver and give the facts to the police, do not feel obligated to admit responsibility for the accident. The things that you say immediately following an accident may be used against you during the course of litigation. You may think that you were responsible for the accident and later learn that the other driver caused it or the other driver was equally at fault.
4. WHAT TO DO IF YOUR CAR IS TOWED Before you allow a truck driver to pick up your car, be sure to ask the driver how much it will cost and tell the driver where to take the car. Get the name, address, license number, registration number, and telephone number of the driver and the towing company.
5. IMPORTANT FOLLOW-UP PROCEDURES
Contact a Lawyer Even the simplest automobile accidents require as many steps to be undertaken by a person who suffers injury. Your own insurance company must be contacted in the appropriate way with information regarding your personal injury protection plan obtained. No-fault benefits need to be secured as well as any benefits that may be available for an uninsured vehicle accident or an underinsured vehicle accident. Failure to properly notify the company through competent counsel may lead to an objection to such a claim on a later date.
Follow Up With Your Medical Care Providers In many cases involving injury, it is important that you follow up your medical care on a consistent basis. It is important that proper follow-up medical care be obtained in order to keep a person from developing further pain which may become intractable in the future. A doctor may recognize injuries, sometimes serious, that are not readily apparent from the first Emergency Room visit nor to you, even at a later date. The charges for a doctor's visit and medical treatment may be covered by insurance.
Our attorneys have over 12 years of combined experience in handling our clients’ needs including personal injury, worker’s compensation, civil rights, appellate issues, criminal, traffic, DUI/DWI, general litigation and immigration matters. For a Free Confidential Appointment, Contact Us Blumenthal & Blumenthal, LLC Phone number: 314-731-7288 Fax number: 314-731-7877 E-mail address: lmblumenthal@blumenthalfirm.com ::adCenter:: | |
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