Many pedestrian injuries here involve predictable “high-foot-traffic” moments: people crossing to reach local destinations, families moving through busier streets, and commuters navigating intersections where drivers are turning, merging, or reacting to changing signals.
Common Glendale Heights patterns include:
- Crashes at turning lanes and intersection approaches (drivers may be focused on traffic flow rather than pedestrians entering the crosswalk area)
- Darkness/low-visibility incidents (even in suburban settings, lighting and glare can reduce a driver’s reaction time)
- After-event or late-day walking (fatigue and speeding concerns can surface after work or weekend activities)
- “I didn’t see them” disputes that hinge on sightlines, signal timing, and whether the driver had time to brake
When liability is contested, the difference between a strong claim and a weak one is often whether key details are documented promptly.


