After a St. Louis Car Accident: The 7-Day Timeline to Protect Your Claim

If you want to protect your potential claim in a car accident, you need to move fast. While Missouri law (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120) gives you typically up to five years to file that claim, you really have 7 days to start preserving crash evidence…. read more

St. Louis Car Accident Report: How to Get a Crash Report (City or County)

Key Takeaways: Your crash location determines which agency handles your report. St. Louis City and County are separate jurisdictions. You’ll need the exact address or the intersection to determine whether you need SLMPD, County Police, or a municipal department. Reports take 3-10 business days on… read more

Rear-End Collision Injuries: Symptoms, Treatment Timelines, and How Recovery Works

A rear-end collision can happen anywhere in St. Louis, whether on a busy highway or in stop-and-go traffic downtown. You may walk away from someone slamming into your car, feeling shaken but fine. The next morning, you can barely get out of bed, your back… read more

Rear-End Crash Myths and Exceptions in Missouri

The rear-end driver isn’t always at fault. Missouri law assumes the driver in the back caused the crash, but sudden stops without reason or unsafe lane changes can shift the blame to the driver in front. Chain reactions divide fault among multiple drivers. When three… read more

Missouri Shared-Fault Car Accident Scenarios: Examples and Recovery Math

Key Takeaways: You can recover compensation in Missouri even if you’re partially at fault. Missouri’s comparative negligence means your fault percentage reduces your payout, but doesn’t completely eliminate it, even if you’re 99% at fault. Strong evidence can lower your fault percentage. When an insurance… read more

How to Correct Missouri Police Crash Report Errors in 30 Days 

Key Takeaways:  Request the official MSHP crash report as soon as possible. The sooner you spot errors, the easier it is to gather evidence and push for corrections before the evidence disappears. Only an officer or agency can amend the police report. You can ask… read more

St. Louis Video Retention and How to Request Footage After a Car Crash

Key Takeaways: Act within 30 days to retain video footage. RTCC cameras typically hold footage for only 30 days unless it becomes evidence. And businesses may overwrite security footage even faster. Not all cameras record videos. MoDOT traffic cameras on highways provide live feeds only…. read more

How Car Accident Settlements Are Calculated

Key Takeaways: Settlement calculations use four main factors. Your settlement amount mainly depends on your injury severity, medical costs, lost income/earning capacity, and available insurance policy limits.  Documentation is critical for your claim. To recover compensation, you’ll need proof of your damages, such as medical… read more

How Missouri Police Determine Fault: Decoding the Missouri Uniform Crash Report

Key Takeaways: The Missouri Uniform Crash Report isn’t the final word on fault. Accident reports are based on preliminary observations and aren’t set in stone. They may also include mistakes or may have left out crucial details. Contributing circumstances codes tell you what the officer… read more

Missouri Car Accident Fault and Evidence

Key Takeaways:  You can recover damages in Missouri even if you’re partially at fault. Your compensation gets reduced by your fault percentage, but you could still recover damages even if you’re 99% responsible. Act fast to gather evidence proving fault. Dashcam footage and security camera… read more