My inspector performed life-saving CPR once, does that count?
Seriously though, you break it you bought it. If you touched it, they could blame you for breaking it. When I was mostly out in the field I would show up to tag electric service panels before utility connection. No one was ever there, and I'm not going to tag something without confirming it's done correctly, so I opened up panels all the time. Someone tried to send me a bill for damages claiming I broke something, it didn't make any sense. I called him up and asked what it was about and offered to meet with him and the homeowner to explain why I had to open the panel in the first place; he dropped it.
Boss at the time said no more opening panels, I said sure, then no more tags unless the contractor is present. She agreed as how are we supposed to authorize the utility to render service w/o inspection? Contractors weren't having it, so they somehow convinced local utility guys to connect without inspection. I caught it within a few days, alerted the utility and they obviously put a quick stop to that. It's now understood and accepted that they have to be there for inspection, duh.
Anyways, point is, we learned from that experience (and others) not to touch anything. I won't even use their pen to sign an inspection card.