Can one Facebook post wreck my Casper injury claim?
Yes.
The ER may tell you "rest, limit activity, and monitor symptoms" after a crash or fall, but the insurance company will treat your post, photo, reel, or comment like evidence that you were fine. A smiling picture at a barbecue, a "feeling better" caption, or a joke about your wreck on I-25 near Casper can get blown up into "not seriously injured" or "back to normal."
That is one of the fastest ways people cut the value of their own case in the first 48 hours.
The right move is simple: stop posting. Do not post about the crash, your pain, your treatment, your work status, your trip, or your physical activity. Do not delete old posts either if a claim is already live; that can create a different problem. Just lock down privacy, stop talking online, and tell friends not to tag you.
If you were hurt while working, report it fast. In Wyoming, a job injury should be reported to your employer within 72 hours, and the injury report generally must be filed with the Wyoming Workers' Compensation Division within 10 days. Missing those deadlines can damage the claim more than people realize.
For a vehicle wreck, make sure law enforcement is notified. In Wyoming, crashes involving injury, death, or major property damage should be reported, and in Casper that can mean Casper Police Department, Natrona County Sheriff's Office, or the Wyoming Highway Patrol, depending on where it happened.
What to do instead of posting:
- Save photos privately
- Keep discharge papers and work excuses
- Follow the doctor's restrictions exactly
- Write down symptoms daily
- Do not give the insurer extra chatter they can twist
Insurers love contradictions. Your chart and your social media need to match.
The information above is educational and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every injury case turns on its own facts. If you're dealing with this right now, get a professional opinion.
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