Injuries are only part of the case. Insurers evaluate whether they can prove the crash was caused by someone else’s unreasonable driving—and they look for gaps.
In Tuscaloosa, common realities can affect how evidence is collected and how fault is argued:
- Busy intersections during peak commute hours (drivers turning, merging, and changing lanes while cyclists are present)
- Roadwork and construction detours that alter lane positioning and visibility
- Night and low-light rides where headlights, street lighting, and reflective gear become major points in disputes
- Campus-area traffic patterns with frequent stops, cross-traffic, and higher pedestrian activity
Because these factors show up in local crash reports and witness recollections, your lawyer will often focus on details like traffic-control devices, sightlines, and sequence of events—not just the fact that you were injured.


