Abilene traffic patterns and roadway design can create scenarios where fault gets disputed early—especially when crash details are remembered differently by drivers and riders.
Common local friction points include:
- Turning and yielding conflicts at intersections where drivers are focused on traffic flow and cyclists may be less expected.
- Lane position disputes on multi-lane roads, where a “close pass” or late lane change can become a blame argument.
- Construction and resurfacing zones that introduce debris, uneven pavement, or altered signage—proving what was present at the time matters.
- Day-night visibility issues (headlights, street lighting, glare) that affect witness accounts.
After a crash, the first goal isn’t to “win an argument.” It’s to preserve what happened while it’s still provable.


