In the first days after a bicycle accident, the goal isn’t to win an argument—it’s to preserve facts. In Sanger, common crash patterns often involve:
- Driver turn/merge issues at intersections and roadway access points
- Lane position disputes when a car passes too closely or drifts near a bike lane (or where none exists)
- Construction-adjacent hazards that change traffic flow near work zones
- School-and-commute timing that affects visibility, traffic density, and witness availability
When evidence gets messy, insurers may claim the crash “doesn’t match” the medical record or that you were partly responsible. A lawyer’s job is to build a coherent case from the scene to your treatment—not just repeat what you remember.


