Evanston’s mix of residential neighborhoods, dense pedestrian activity, and commuting traffic creates predictable risk patterns in catastrophic cases:
- Pedestrian and crosswalk crashes: When visibility, timing, or driver attention is disputed, liability can become complicated.
- Rush-hour collisions and rear-end impacts: Even “ordinary” commute crashes can cause catastrophic injuries when force transmits to the head, neck, or spine.
- Nighttime travel and event crowds: Miscommunication, fatigue, impaired driving allegations, and unclear witness accounts can affect early investigation.
- Construction-adjacent routes: Lane shifts and temporary traffic control can become central when fault is contested.
In these situations, the fastest way to lose leverage is to act too slowly or rely on incomplete information. A strong catastrophic injury claim starts with evidence preservation and a clear theory of how the incident caused the long-term harm.


