In suburban communities like Roselle, many drivers know the roads—until the moment they don’t. Pedestrian cases frequently hinge on small details, such as:
- Turning movements at busy corridors where drivers may be focused on traffic flow.
- Crosswalk visibility affected by glare, weather, or nighttime lighting.
- Construction and traffic pattern changes that can shift where pedestrians walk and how drivers expect them.
- Commuter timing—morning drop-offs, after-work foot traffic, and weekends when streets feel “busier than usual.”
Even when you believe the driver was clearly at fault, insurers may still challenge what happened first: where you were when they first saw you, whether they had time to stop, and what each person did in the seconds leading up to impact.


