In smaller communities, it’s common for initial accounts to differ: one person remembers the light timing, another remembers a vehicle’s position, and a third recalls a hazard that wasn’t obvious at the moment. Add to that the way cyclists travel—faster than pedestrians, slower than cars, often sharing the road—and you get disputes over:
- Who was in the lane at impact (and whether the rider had room to safely pass)
- Whether a driver saw the cyclist in time
- Whether road conditions, debris, or markings contributed
- Whether injuries match the crash mechanics
Our approach focuses on turning those moving parts into a clear, defensible record.


