While hit-and-runs can happen anywhere, Johns Creek has traffic patterns that create recurring risk scenarios:
- High-volume commutes and intersection traffic. Collisions at signalized intersections can involve quick lane changes and limited time to capture details.
- Residential street speed and turn impacts. A driver may flee after a side-impact or turn-related contact—especially if they believe it was “minor.”
- Pedestrian exposure near everyday routes. Residents walking to nearby destinations, crosswalks, and school-adjacent areas can mean the victim is disoriented and may not remember everything immediately.
- Video evidence that gets overwritten. In many cases, nearby cameras and private dash systems aren’t preserved unless someone acts quickly.
Because of that, the “first hour” decisions after the crash can matter more here than people expect.


