Richton Park sits in the Chicago Southland area, where many people drive to work, run errands between shifts, and share the road with pedestrians moving along commercial fronts and neighborhood streets. In practice, pedestrian accidents here often involve:
- Turning maneuvers at intersections where a driver may look for oncoming traffic or cross-traffic—then miss a pedestrian entering the roadway.
- Commuter traffic surges during morning and evening rush, when drivers are less patient and braking distance increases.
- Lighting and visibility issues in winter months, including glare, darker commute hours, and wet pavement that affects stopping.
- Construction and road-work detours that change traffic patterns and sightlines, sometimes forcing pedestrians closer to lanes.
Those details matter because insurance companies commonly argue that the driver “couldn’t see” or that the pedestrian “stepped out unexpectedly.” A strong claim depends on countering those narratives with evidence tied to the actual scene.


