Many bicycle collisions here involve the same recurring patterns:
- Turning drivers who misjudge a cyclist’s speed or fail to fully clear the lane
- Lane changes and merges where a rider is overlooked in the flow of traffic
- Construction and resurfacing that shifts lanes, adds debris, or changes sightlines
- Night and low-visibility issues (headlights, reflective gear, street lighting) that affect what each party claims happened
- Driveway or neighborhood cut-throughs where drivers enter roads without seeing oncoming cyclists
After a crash, insurers may focus on anything they can use to reduce payout—questions about where you were riding, whether you had lights/reflectors, or whether your injuries “match” the timing of the incident.
A lawyer’s job is to translate your situation into a claim supported by evidence—so your case isn’t decided by assumptions.


