Many Waterbury pedestrian cases involve the kind of conditions that affect whether a driver could and should have seen you in time:
- Mixed traffic at peak commute hours around major roads where cars are accelerating, turning, or changing lanes.
- Crossings near shopping and transit activity, where foot traffic can increase quickly and visibility can be affected by parked cars, storefront lighting, or crowds.
- Weather and seasonal visibility—snow glare, wet pavement, and reduced daylight in fall and winter can complicate how quickly a vehicle could stop.
- Construction and roadway changes that shift lanes, narrow travel paths, or alter how drivers approach intersections.
Those factors matter because insurance companies often argue that the driver “couldn’t reasonably react” or that your injuries are unrelated to the crash. Your evidence has to be ready for that argument.


