Soon after a crash, an insurer often asks for a recorded statement. It sounds routine, but it can seriously affect your claim.
Why They Want It
Adjusters use recorded statements to lock in your account early — before you know the full extent of your injuries — and to find inconsistencies or admissions they can use to reduce or deny your claim.
Anything you say can be replayed against you later.
You're Often Not Required To
You generally must cooperate with your own insurer, but you usually are not obligated to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurer. Politely declining until you've consulted an attorney is often wise.
Protecting Yourself
If you do speak, stick to basic facts, don't guess, and don't downplay or exaggerate. Better yet, let an attorney handle communications so a single misstatement doesn't undermine an otherwise strong claim.
Injured in Arkansas? Injury Claim Team connects injured Arkansans with experienced personal injury attorneys across all 75 counties. A free, confidential case review costs nothing, and you pay no fee unless you win. Call 973-566-5599 24/7.
This article is general information about Arkansas law, not legal advice for your specific situation. For advice about your claim, request a free case review.
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