Manhattan is a college and community hub, and that means higher pedestrian activity, busy parking lots, and frequent traffic patterns around peak hours. Broken bone injuries often happen in ways that insurers try to minimize—like:
- Crosswalk and sidewalk incidents involving drivers who claim they “couldn’t see” a pedestrian
- Parking lot and ramp falls (icy patches, uneven surfaces, wet pavement after weather changes)
- Construction-zone collisions near higher-traffic routes and work areas
- Workplace injuries in industrial and service settings where safety procedures may be disputed
When liability is disputed, it’s not enough to say “I was hurt.” You need a clear connection between the incident, the fracture diagnosis, and the treatment path that followed.


