What To Do If You Witness a Car Accident?

Witnessing a car accident on a Las Vegas street is a shocking and confusing experience. Your first instinct is to help, but in the heat of the moment, it’s hard to know what actions are truly safe and effective.

This guide provides clear, step-by-step instructions for bystanders. The steps you take in the minutes after a crash can make a critical difference for the people involved. Knowing how to respond correctly ensures that your help is both powerful and safe for everyone—including yourself.

Your Immediate Response: A Step-by-Step Safety Checklist

In the chaotic moments after a collision, your safety and the safety of those involved are the top priorities. Before you do anything else, take a breath and focus on a calm, methodical response. The following steps are designed to help you protect the scene, alert emergency services, and provide aid safely and effectively. Your clear-headed actions can prevent further harm.

Key Actions to Avoid

  • DON’T put yourself in danger by running into traffic or getting too close to an unstable vehicle. Your safety comes first.
  • DON’T move an injured person unless they are in immediate, life-threatening danger, such as from a fire or oncoming traffic. Moving someone with a potential neck or spine injury can cause permanent damage.
  • DON’T speculate about who was at fault when talking to drivers, passengers, or the police. Stick only to what you saw and heard.
  • DON’T leave the scene before speaking with the police, if at all possible. Your statement is a crucial piece of evidence.

Pull Over Safely and Protect the Scene

Before you can help anyone else, you must ensure you are not in harm’s way. Do not slam on your brakes or stop in a live lane of traffic.

Instead, carefully pull your vehicle over to a safe location, at least 100 feet from the accident if possible. Turn on your hazard lights immediately to alert other drivers to the danger ahead. Before exiting your vehicle, take a moment to assess the scene for hazards like leaking fluids, smoke, fire, or downed power lines. The most important rule is not to become another victim.

Call 911 With Clear, Calm Information

This is the single most important action you can take. A fast call to 911 is the quickest way to get professional medical and police assistance to the scene. When the dispatcher answers, provide clear, calm information.

Tell the 911 dispatcher:

  • The exact location: Use cross-streets, highway mile markers, or major landmarks. For example, “the intersection of Tropicana Avenue and the Strip,” or “I-15 Northbound near the Charleston exit.”
  • The number of vehicles involved and a brief description.
  • Any visible injuries you can see, such as “one person is bleeding” or “a driver appears to be unconscious.”
  • Any urgent hazards that require the fire department, such as smoke, flames, or people trapped in a vehicle.

How to Help Safely Under Nevada’s Good Samaritan Law

Many people hesitate to help for fear of being sued if something goes wrong. In Nevada, you are protected.

Nevada’s “Good Samaritan Law” (NRS 41.500) legally protects bystanders who, in good faith, offer reasonable assistance at the scene of an emergency. The key is providing “reasonable aid.” This typically includes actions like offering a blanket, providing comfort, or using your own first-aid training.

It does not include actions you aren’t trained for, especially moving an injured person. Unless a vehicle is on fire or in another imminently dangerous situation, leave the injured individuals where they are until paramedics arrive. You can do the most good by simply being a reassuring presence.

Your Role as a Witness: Observing and Reporting the Facts

Once you’ve ensured the scene is safe and 911 has been called, your role transitions from providing immediate aid to becoming an accurate observer. The information you gather can be invaluable for the official investigation and for ensuring the people involved are treated fairly. Your goal is to be a reliable source of factual, unbiased information.

Record These Key Details for Your Witness Statement

Your memory will be sharpest in the moments after the crash. Use your phone’s notes app or a piece of paper to jot down everything you can remember. Details that seem small can become incredibly important later.

Focus on capturing these key facts:

  • Vehicle Information: The make, model, color, and license plate number for all cars involved.
  • Time and Conditions: The approximate time of the accident, as well as the weather and road conditions (e.g., sunny, raining, wet pavement).
  • Sequence of Events: Write down, step by step, exactly what you saw. Which car was in which lane? Who was moving, and in what direction? Did you see a turn signal?
  • Driver Statements: Note any spontaneous comments you heard from the drivers after the crash, such as “I’m so sorry,” or “I didn’t see them.”
  • Your Observations: Did you notice anything else, like a driver who appeared to be on their phone or a traffic light that was malfunctioning?

How to Give a Factual Statement to Police

When law enforcement from LVMPD or Nevada Highway Patrol arrives, they will want to take your statement. Be calm, clear, and concise. Your job is simply to report what you personally saw and heard.

Don’t Play Detective: Be a Camera, Not a Judge

Your role is to be a camera, recording the facts without interpretation. Avoid guessing about things like the speed of the vehicles or who you think was at fault. Stick only to what you know for sure. It is perfectly acceptable—and often best—to say, “I’m not sure,” if you don’t know an answer.

After the Accident: What a Witness Should Expect

Your involvement usually doesn’t end when you leave the scene. Understanding what might happen in the following days and weeks can help ease any anxiety about your role in the legal process.

How to Handle a Call from an Insurance Adjuster

It is common for insurance adjusters from one or both of the involved parties to call you for a statement. It’s important to know your rights. You are not legally obligated to provide them with a recorded statement.

If you do choose to speak with an adjuster, the best policy is to only state the same objective facts you provided to the police. Decline to offer opinions, guess about fault, or speculate on anything you did not directly witness.

Understanding a Request for a Deposition or Testimony

In some cases, you may be asked to participate further in the legal process. The two most common requests are for a deposition or testimony.

  • Deposition: This is a formal, sworn statement taken out of court. Lawyers for the involved parties will ask you questions about what you witnessed, and your answers will be recorded by a court reporter. It is a standard fact-finding step in the personal injury claim process.
  • Testimony: This is a sworn statement you give in a courtroom during a trial.

It is important to know that the vast majority of personal injury cases are settled before ever reaching a trial. While being asked to testify in court is rare, your willingness to do so can be incredibly important for the case.

Why Your Actions Matter: The Impact of a Good Witness

It’s natural to wonder if stopping to help at an accident scene truly makes a difference. The answer is an emphatic yes. In the confusing aftermath of a crash, a calm, objective witness is one of the most powerful forces for clarity and justice. Your decision to get involved has a profound and lasting impact on the outcome.

Providing a Crucial, Unbiased Account of the Crash

Car accident cases often devolve into a “he said, she said” stalemate, where each driver has a different version of events. As an independent witness, you have no financial stake in the outcome. This makes your testimony incredibly credible. You are not a friend or family member of either party; you are simply a bystander who saw what happened. Your unbiased perspective can be the key to breaking a deadlock and establishing the facts of the case.

Helping an Injured Victim Secure Fair Compensation

Ultimately, your factual statement can be the single most important piece of evidence that helps an injured person prove their case. When someone is hurt because of another driver’s negligence, they have a right to seek compensation for their medical bills, lost wages, and recovery. Without a clear, credible witness, it can be difficult for them to prove their claim.

By taking the time to stop, observe, and give a statement, you provide the crucial evidence an injury victim may need to get the fair compensation necessary to rebuild their life. Your actions are a powerful example of civic duty in action.

Don’t Take a Tiny Check!​

For over 40 years, Jack Bernstein has protected the rights of injured victims and their families. Don’t let medical bills, lost wages, and other expenses put a burden on your family.

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