Finding video of a crash in Macon depends on which systems exist near the location, and an important limitation is that many traffic cameras are for live monitoring rather than recording. The Georgia Department of Transportation operates cameras on interstates and major routes, viewable through the state’s 511 traffic service, but these generally provide live feeds for traffic management and are not retained for later retrieval, so they usually cannot supply after-the-fact footage of a collision.
Other sources are more promising. Private businesses along a roadway, such as gas stations, banks, and stores, frequently have exterior security cameras that may capture nearby traffic, and obtaining that footage means contacting the property owner directly. Some intersection or enforcement camera systems do record. Because most security systems overwrite footage within days, prompt requests are critical when video exists, and an attorney can send a preservation letter to a business or agency to prevent deletion once a claim is anticipated.
Footage from other vehicles is another avenue. Dashboard cameras in passing cars, commercial trucks, and similar vehicles sometimes record a crash, which depends on identifying and reaching those drivers as potential witnesses. Publicly posted bystander video occasionally surfaces as well. The realistic picture is that government traffic cameras rarely provide recorded crash footage, that privately owned cameras are the more common source, and that footage tends to disappear quickly through automatic overwriting. Acting quickly to identify nearby cameras and request or preserve any recordings is what determines whether useful video can be recovered, since the window before deletion is often short.