Greenfield’s mix of residential neighborhoods, retail corridors, and commuter traffic means pedestrian crashes often involve predictable—but disputable—fact patterns:
- Turning vehicles near intersections: Drivers may claim they “looked but didn’t see” a pedestrian until late.
- Crosswalk and signal disputes: Even when a crosswalk exists, visibility, signal timing, lane position, and driver approach can become contested.
- Construction and roadside detours: Temporary signage, narrowed lanes, and altered sightlines can change what a driver should have expected.
- Evening visibility and glare: Headlights, wet pavement, and dusk lighting can affect what was visible and when.
In many cases, the fight isn’t over whether someone was hit—it’s over who had the last clear chance and whether the injuries shown in medical records match the crash timeline.


