Martinez pedestrian crashes often involve patterns tied to how people actually move through town—commuters, families, and visitors sharing the same road space.
You may be dealing with a case stemming from:
- Crosswalk and turning conflicts at intersections where drivers are focused on traffic flow rather than pedestrians.
- Sidewalk and driveway visibility issues—especially when parked vehicles, landscaping, or trucks block sight lines.
- Night and low-light impacts near areas with less consistent lighting.
- Construction or lane changes that shift traffic patterns and reduce driver reaction time.
- Bus-stop and school-area activity, where pedestrians cross more frequently and drivers may not anticipate it.
If you were hurt in one of these scenarios, the early evidence matters. Insurance companies often try to narrow the story to “one moment” rather than the full sequence—signal timing, sight distance, speed, and what the driver should have been able to see.


