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Truck Accidents

What Evidence Should You Save After a Truck Accident in Texas?

A practical guide to saving photos, records, witness information, black box evidence, and insurance communications after a Texas truck accident.

Published 2026-06-12 | Updated 2026-06-12

Quick Answer

After a truck accident in Texas, save crash photos, medical records, police information, witness names, insurance letters, repair estimates, and anything that may help preserve truck evidence such as black box data, driver logs, maintenance records, and dash camera footage.

Why truck accident evidence disappears quickly

Truck cases often involve commercial vehicles, multiple companies, electronic data, driver records, dispatch information, and maintenance history. Some evidence may be overwritten, repaired, moved, or lost unless it is preserved early.

Important evidence to keep

Save photos of the vehicles, roadway, skid marks, debris, traffic controls, injuries, insurance cards, company names, license plates, DOT numbers, medical paperwork, hospital discharge instructions, and all texts or emails from insurance companies.

Why legal help may matter early

A lawyer may send preservation letters, identify responsible companies, request electronic control module data, review driver qualification issues, and investigate whether federal or state trucking rules were violated.

Need help after an injury?
Call or text Fireball Law. When you don’t know what to do next.

Related Resources

FAQs

Should I save photos after a truck accident?

Yes. Photos of vehicles, road conditions, debris, injuries, signs, traffic signals, and company information can help show what happened before evidence changes.

Can black box evidence matter in a truck accident?

Yes. Electronic data may help show speed, braking, hours of operation, and vehicle behavior, but it should be preserved quickly.