In suburban communities, many pedestrian incidents involve drivers who are “used to the road”—and pedestrians who are trying to cross quickly, often near:
- Commute traffic (rush-hour speed, lane changes, and delayed braking)
- Neighborhood cut-through roads where visibility can be limited by parked cars, shrubs, or uneven lighting
- School-day routes when driver attention is stretched
- Construction zones and detours that alter traffic patterns and crosswalk visibility
- Night or early-morning walking when glare and dark stretches reduce reaction time
Those details matter because Indiana fault decisions often turn on what was foreseeable and what a reasonable driver should have noticed in the conditions present at the time.


