Editorial transparency
How LawIntaker treats authorship, sources, and updates.
Our accident guides are public information, not legal advice. This page explains the editorial signals we use so readers can see who prepared a page, what sources support it, and when it changed.
What LawIntaker is
LawIntaker publishes public legal information and helps route accident intake requests to participating legal teams. LawIntaker is not a law firm. Using the site or contacting LawIntaker does not create an attorney-client relationship. A relationship exists only if a law firm accepts a matter in writing.
Authorship
Pages using the English editorial template identify the person or team that prepared and maintains the content. The author name links to an internal profile that explains the role without implying that the author represents the reader.
Meet the LawIntaker Editorial TeamEditorial review
A reviewer is named on a page only when that review has actually occurred. The reviewer role is editorial and is separate from any attorney who may later evaluate or accept an intake request.
About Aron Solomon, JDSources and citations
We prefer primary public sources when they can support safety, medical, regulatory, or insurance context. Examples include federal agencies, regulations, and official consumer resources. Citation links appear beside supported sections and again in a reference list so readers can inspect the source directly.
A citation provides general context; it does not decide an individual claim. State law, policy language, deadlines, and the facts of the event can change the answer.
Dates and updates
The visible “Last updated” date should match the structured-data date on the same page. We do not add a publication date when the original publication date is not verified, and we do not label a page reviewed without an actual review.
Internal links
Related links are selected for the reader’s next practical question: what to do after a crash, which evidence to save, how insurance may apply, or how a specific accident type changes the intake. Link labels describe the destination instead of using generic phrases such as “click here.”