Many local bike crashes aren’t “one thing and done.” The facts often turn on details like:
- Turning movements and yielding at busy intersections where traffic moves fast.
- Lane positioning on roads with limited space for cyclists and vehicles.
- Construction-related hazards and changing road layouts.
- Visibility issues during morning/evening commutes.
- Commercial vehicles involved in deliveries and industrial traffic patterns.
Even if you feel sure about what happened, insurers may try to argue you were partly responsible or that your injuries were caused by something else. In California, comparative fault can reduce recovery, so it matters how the evidence is framed early.


