Business roundup: Crash Tech expands, adult day care opens & Kenan Advantage buys company
Crash Tech Reconstruction Services, founded in 2011 by Jackson Township resident Eric Brown, is expanding its business throughout the United States.
Crash Tech Reconstruction Services, founded in 2011 by Jackson Township resident Eric Brown, is expanding its business throughout the United States.

JACKSON TWP. − Crash Tech Reconstruction Services aims to expand its reach this year into all corners of the United States.

The company founded in 2011 by Jackson Township resident Eric Brown provides crash investigation services, primarily to civil and criminal defense attorneys and insurance companies. His six-person staff can scan vehicles to create 3D models, fly drones for an aerial view of crash scenes, and download the "black box" in vehicles to gather speed, steering and braking data.

"Then we put everything together, build the court exhibits and get it all to the attorneys and then they take all that into trial, and we'll come into the courtroom and provide all the testimony then as the expert witness," Brown said.

Crash Tech has field offices in Chillicothe and Houston in addition to the administrative headquarters in Jackson Township. The company began using three Entegra Coach motorhomes, which are similar in size to Amazon delivery vans, to avoid working in-office during the pandemic.

Brown said he plans this year to add a larger vehicle, more like a tour bus, to serve Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas from a hub in northern Florida. Then he'd like to station one of the vans or mobile field offices in the Pacific Northwest.

"Once we add our fourth vehicle, I think if we quarter the United States, we'd have a pretty good region for each but I may, at that point, have to expand even more," he said.

So far, Brown has been too busy to establish a timeline for the expansion. Crash Tech's caseload this year already reached 200 ― about as many cases as the company had in all of 2023.

That demand, which Brown attributed in part to attorneys recognizing the value Crash Tech provides after increasingly favorable verdicts, is why the company is expanding. He said staff have traveled as far west as Montana and operate "pretty much all across the country now," aside from the remaining states.

Crash Tech Reconstruction Services, founded in 2011 by Jackson Township resident Eric Brown, is expanding its business throughout the United States.
Crash Tech Reconstruction Services, founded in 2011 by Jackson Township resident Eric Brown, is expanding its business throughout the United States.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the number of traffic deaths in 2020 increased by 7.3% from the year prior and traffic deaths rose 10.1% in 2021 to 42,939 ― the highest amount since the last peak of more than 43,000 deaths in 2005. Traffic fatalities decreased by 0.3% in 2022 and were trending downward for the first three quarters of 2023 but were still greater than pre-pandemic deaths.

Brown, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, retired after 11 years at the Canton Police Department and then focused full-time on Crash Tech. To retain his law enforcement credentials, he joined the Stark County Sheriff's Reserve Division, where he is a sergeant and part of the multi-jurisdictional crash investigation team.