What happens when a paralegal who spent 13 years inside personal injury law firms watching critical crash evidence disappear before cases ever reached litigation decides to stop waiting for someone else to fix it — and builds a crash reconstruction firm with her detective husband, a former NHTSA engineer, and ACTAR-certified reconstructionists who can read a car's black box like a flight recorder? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Marya Ryan, co-founder of Bolo Consulting, about the event data recorder that has been mandatory in every vehicle since 2014 and records the four seconds before every crash — speed, braking, swerving, everything — and why that data disappears the moment a tow yard releases a vehicle. Marya explains how the defense has been using this technology more aggressively than plaintiffs for years, why she built a flat-fee model at $600 to make it affordable enough that attorneys don't have to gamble, and how delta V data from a crash can prove that a client's herniation was physically possible even when the defense says the impact wasn't severe enough. They also discuss how she once tracked down a black box that had already been sold to Mexico and had it shipped back, why a Tesla is actually easier to extract data from than most vehicles, how 3D laser scanning and drone photography create trial-ready animations that look like movies, and why the most common mistake attorneys make is simply not sending the preservation letter fast enough. Marya Ryan is the co-founder of Bolo Consulting in South Florida, a crash reconstruction and evidence preservation firm serving personal injury attorneys in Florida, Texas, and the DC/Maryland/Virginia area. Connect with Marya Ryan: bololegal.com ops@bololegal.com Phone: 561-901-9968 South Florida, Florida Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Marya Ryan 01:12 Thirteen years watching evidence disappear — and why she and her detective husband opened Bolo 02:07 What a paralegal sees day to day that trained her to spot the gap 02:34 The event data recorder — mandated since 2014 and recording four seconds before every crash 04:19 How EDR data increases claim value even when liability is already clear 04:50 Why the defense uses black boxes more than plaintiffs do 05:30 The $600 flat fee model and why it changes what attorneys will actually do 06:22 Sixty percent EDR preservation, forty percent full reconstruction — the business breakdown 07:39 Fifteen to twenty attorneys who call on every single case with good policy and damages 08:25 Delta V data and proving injury causation when the defense says it wasn't a bad crash 09:01 Walking attorneys through the findings — included in the flat fee 10:27 3D laser scanning, drone photography, and trial-ready animation that looks like a movie 11:17 The most common mistake attorneys make — not sending the preservation letter fast enough 12:31 Can insurance companies be actively moving vehicles out of reach 13:27 How Teslas work — easier than most vehicles, except the Cybertruck 14:57 The first 24 hours after an attorney calls Bolo 17:42 What most attorneys don't know about what EDR data can actually do 18:45 How Bolo educates attorneys at first contact and in lunch-and-learns 20:09 How the firm grows — almost entirely by referral 21:51 The competition and why price point and speed are the main advantages 22:52 Expanding to Texas and DC-Maryland-Virginia 24:37 Addressing the skeptic — how can you be that affordable and still comprehensive 28:18 What makes a crash reconstruction report hold up under cross-examination 28:51 How often experts actually appear in court 29:41 Working for both plaintiffs and defendants — why the data is the same either way 30:35 How to contact Bolo and get a free consultation on any police report Hashtags #MaryaRyan #BoloConsulting #CrashReconstruction #EventDataRecorder #BlackBox #PersonalInjuryLaw #TrustcastShow #EDREvidence #AccidentReconstruction #SouthFloridaLaw