Port Townsend has a unique mix of commuting routes, pedestrian activity, and tourism-driven traffic patterns. That combination can create factual disputes that matter in catastrophic injury cases—especially when fault is not clear at first.
Common friction points we see in the region include:
- Driver–pedestrian incidents in busier corridors during peak hours, where witness accounts can vary.
- Crashes on wet roads (common in the Pacific Northwest), where defense teams may argue speed or visibility issues.
- Worksite and industrial injuries involving maintenance, construction, or maritime-adjacent activity, where multiple parties may share responsibility.
- Tourism-related incidents where documentation is incomplete, witnesses leave quickly, or video footage is overwritten.
When injuries are catastrophic, insurers often treat the claim as a negotiation problem first—pushing for recorded statements, quick “clarifying” answers, or early settlement offers before the full extent of impairment is known.


