Pedestrian collisions here often occur in predictable, everyday settings—places people assume are “normal” until something goes wrong:
- Crosswalks and signalized intersections near shopping corridors where turning vehicles share space with walkers
- Weekend and evening foot traffic when people are headed to restaurants, errands, or events
- Commute-time congestion where sightlines and reaction time are affected by traffic flow
- Construction or lane changes that can shift pedestrian paths and confuse drivers
The result is that fault disputes aren’t always about “who stepped out.” They’re often about what the driver could reasonably see and do in the moment, and what evidence captured that reality.


