Many pedestrian injury cases here involve predictable local patterns:
- Tourist-heavy crossings: Visitors walking to shops, marinas, and attractions may cross outside of ideal visibility windows.
- Evening glare and low-light conditions: Late-day sun angle and nighttime lighting can affect what a driver could reasonably see.
- Multi-lane roads and turning traffic: Drivers turning into or out of busier corridors often create disputes about right-of-way and timing.
- Heat, distraction, and speeding risk: Summer travel can increase fatigue and aggressive driving behavior, which can impact stopping distance and attention.
When liability is contested, these details aren’t “small.” They can change whether insurance views the incident as preventable negligence or a dispute about who saw what first.


