In a suburban community like Bradley, many collisions happen in predictable “everyday” settings—places people use without thinking every day:
- School and after-school traffic: drivers accelerating or drifting toward turn lanes while students and caregivers cross.
- Commuter corridors: higher speeds and heavier traffic flow, where drivers have less time to react.
- Sidewalk interruptions and driveways: pedestrians forced to step into roadways near curb cuts, parking lot exits, or construction detours.
- Seasonal visibility issues: glare, wet pavement, snow cover, and reduced sight lines near intersections.
Those factors don’t change the law—but they change what evidence matters. In Bradley cases, investigators often focus on sight distance, approach speed, lane positioning, lighting conditions, and the timing of pedestrian movement.


