Recovering Your Loss

3 Ways To Ensure Social Media Doesn't Ruin Your Injury Case

You definitely need to do certain things to win an injury case. For instance, you should collect evidence, seek medical assistance, and get guidance from a personal injury attorney. However, ensure you use social media cautiously because what you post could hurt your claim in a big way. Remember that other interested parties like the other driver, their attorney, and the insurer could monitor your posts, just to see if they could get some to support their narrative. As the claimant, do these three things if you don't want social media to ruin the process. 

Consider the Videos or Pictures You Post

The fact that you have filed an injury lawsuit doesn't mean you should delete or do away with your social media channels or have no right to access them. Instead, you should always be careful with the pictures and videos you post. Of course, everyone wants to share their worst and best moments with their friends on social media, but you should avoid it when pursuing an injury claim. 

For instance, if the pictures you post suggest you were hiking or biking with colleagues or friends, the interested parties may question the validity of your case. So be careful with what you say or post to avoid credibility issues throughout the legal process.

Ask Your Colleagues and Friends to Watch What They Post 

You could be careful and use your platforms responsibly, but what others post could damage your case. Of course, you may not control what they post, but ensure they know how any posts related to your case could affect the expected outcome. Ask your friends and relatives not to post anything about the injuries sustained or your health condition on their social media accounts. You don't want someone to use what your friends and family post as evidence to weaken your case.

Don't Accept Every Friend Request

You may want to accept as many friend requests as possible to have a huge following. However, do it cautiously if you have recently filed an injury claim. Where possible, you shouldn't accept every friend request, mainly those from people you don't know, because some of them could be private investigators. Others could be sent by an interested party to get information from you and use it to their advantage. They may seem very concerned with what happened to you. As a result, you may innocently narrate everything to them, not knowing they want to jeopardize your case. It's even advisable to decline friend requests from some of the people you know if you doubt their mission.

Contact a local personal injury lawyer to learn more. 


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