Sandy Springs is full of activity—commuter routes, multi-lane roads, and intersections where drivers are juggling timing, GPS, and quick lane changes. In the real world, that means pedestrian cases often turn on details like:
- Visibility and sightlines near medians, turns, and high-traffic approaches
- Signal timing and whether a driver had a lawful duty to yield
- Multiple vehicles moving through an area (making it unclear who had the best opportunity to avoid the crash)
- Construction and shifting traffic patterns that can affect driver expectations
- Limited dashcam coverage if the impact occurs in a spot cameras don’t capture well
Even when a driver admits fault or the crash seems obvious, insurance companies may still question the timeline, dispute injury severity, or argue you were partly responsible.


