Alexander City traffic can shift fast depending on the time of day and where you’re riding—near business corridors, around intersections with heavier turning movements, and along routes where drivers may not expect cyclists.
In many cases, the dispute isn’t “did a crash happen?” It’s who should have seen whom, who had the duty to yield, and whether the driver acted reasonably once the cyclist was in view. That’s why your claim often turns on details like:
- lighting conditions (morning/evening rides)
- lane positioning and turning behavior at intersections
- roadway hazards (potholes, debris, construction transitions)
- whether the driver responded safely after noticing the cyclist
A lawyer’s job is to translate those facts into a liability narrative insurers can’t ignore.


