Pedestrian crashes in Sarasota often involve patterns tied to local movement:
- Tourist-heavy corridors and seasonal surges: drivers may be unfamiliar with traffic flow, crosswalk timing, and local street signage.
- High-speed turning conflicts: many crashes happen when a driver turns through an area where a pedestrian is crossing or about to cross.
- Late-day lighting and glare: Florida sunsets can reduce visibility at exactly the time foot traffic increases.
- Construction and lane changes: detours, temporary signage, and shifting traffic patterns can create confusion about where pedestrians should be and where drivers are expected to yield.
- Bus stops, rideshare drop-offs, and hotel entrances: people cross mid-block or step into lanes expecting drivers to slow—then they don’t.
These factors don’t replace proof, but they shape the investigation. We look closely at how the scene worked at the time of the crash.


