In Wheeling, cyclists commonly share the road with drivers who are:
- heading to work or school and making frequent turns,
- navigating traffic at high-volume times,
- driving more cautiously near residential areas—but still missing cyclists in blind spots,
- dealing with construction or changing lane patterns.
When a crash happens, the early narrative can shift fast—particularly if the other side claims the cyclist was at fault or that the injuries weren’t caused by the incident.
Our job is to make sure the story is consistent with what can be proven: the roadway conditions, the sequence of events, and the medical timeline.


