A practical checklist for Point MacKenzie and Anchorage-area injury victims
Why early decisions matter in Alaska personal injury claims
Also important: Alaska follows a comparative fault system. If an insurance company argues you were partly responsible, any compensation can be reduced by your share of fault—but fault doesn’t automatically wipe out your claim. (law.justia.com) That’s one reason documenting what happened (and getting appropriate medical care) is so critical.
First priority: safety, medical care, and evidence
Step 1: Get medical care right away (even if you “feel okay”)
Step 2: Report the incident and request official documentation
Slip and fall: Notify the property manager or store and ask for an incident report (and a copy if possible). In Alaska, businesses can be responsible even when ice/snow are involved—there isn’t an automatic “natural accumulation” pass in every situation. (law.justia.com)
Work-related injury (including oil field injuries): Report it to a supervisor immediately and keep a copy of any internal reports, emails, or texts confirming notice.
Dog bite: Identify the dog owner/handler and consider contacting local animal control if appropriate, especially if you don’t know the dog’s vaccination status.
Step 3: Photograph, preserve, and back up what you can
Back everything up to a secure cloud folder so it’s not lost if a phone is damaged or replaced.
What not to do: common mistakes that reduce compensation
How fault works in Alaska (and why documentation matters)
That’s why the small details—road conditions, lighting, warning signs, witness contact info, and consistent medical notes—matter. A strong file helps your attorney push back when an insurer tries to shift blame.
| Scenario | What insurers often argue | What helps protect your claim |
|---|---|---|
| Winter car crash | “You were driving too fast for conditions.” | Scene photos, witness statements, report, medical timeline, vehicle data if available. |
| Slip and fall on ice | “It was obvious—watch where you’re going.” | Photos of hazard, lighting, signage, time since last maintenance, incident report, footwear condition. |
| Dog bite | “The dog isn’t dangerous; you provoked it.” | Wound photos, witness accounts, leash/ordinance issues, prior complaints if any. |