In smaller cities and suburban corridors, it’s common for crash investigations to depend on a limited set of proof—brief witness observations, traffic camera availability, roadway markings, and how quickly symptoms are treated.
Common North Ogden scenarios we see include:
- Cars turning across a bike lane or through an intersection without properly accounting for a cyclist’s position.
- Late braking and lane changes near higher-traffic stretches where speeds change quickly.
- Construction detours or roadway transitions that shift where cyclists ride—followed by disputes about whether signage, cones, or lane guidance was adequate.
- Dooring hazards or close-passing near curbside areas where door clearance and passing distance matter.
When insurers reduce payouts, it’s often by questioning: What exactly happened? Who could have avoided the collision? Was the injury really caused by the crash?


