| Hello again, evette:
I agree with the other posters about the value of the tape. The question is how best to preserve it. Other than to get a copy of the tape, what else does she have to talk to the store about? She'll say she fell (or something fell on her), they'll say she didn't. As a matter of fact, she has NOTHING to gain from speaking with them and everything to lose. They'll write down what she says, and I promise you, it will be used against her - not for her. She doesn't need a REPORT from them. They owe her no obligation regarding the tape either. They don't have to show her the tape. They don't even have to keep the tape. She, by herself, holds no sway over the store.
On the other hand, a lawyer can file a subpoena duces tecum along with his law suit, MAKING SURE the tape is preserved as evidence and produced.
That's my view of it, anyhow.
excon |