Many serious pedestrian injuries in Lewiston involve predictable, high-conflict situations:
- Turning and crossing conflicts at intersections where drivers must judge speed and distance.
- Nighttime visibility issues, especially during seasonal darkness and glare.
- Construction and lane changes that shift where drivers expect pedestrians to be.
- Event-related foot traffic (when crowds move faster and drivers may be more distracted).
- Commute patterns where drivers are running late, speeding up, or not fully scanning for people on foot.
Why this matters: insurance companies often argue “it wasn’t foreseeable” or “the pedestrian stepped out unexpectedly.” Your case strategy has to address the local reality—what the driver should have seen, and whether they had a safe opportunity to stop.


