In most bicycle injury claims, the key question is whether another party acted unreasonably under the circumstances and whether that conduct caused your crash.
In Graham, common fact patterns include:
- Right-of-way disputes at intersections (especially where turning vehicles cut across a cyclist’s path)
- Failure to yield when entering or crossing traffic from side streets or driveways
- Close passing / unsafe spacing that forces sudden braking or a loss of control
- Dooring incidents when a parked vehicle opens into the bike lane or traveled path
- Construction, debris, or temporary traffic control that creates hazards cyclists can’t avoid the way cars can
Even when you feel like you “knew what happened,” insurance companies may frame the story differently. A lawyer’s job is to anchor the claim in evidence and a consistent timeline that matches how the collision actually unfolded.


