Many cases don’t hinge on whether the driver saw the pedestrian at some point—they hinge on whether the driver could have avoided the impact once the pedestrian became visible.
In Greenwood, you may be dealing with facts like:
- A driver turning into or out of a shopping/business area and claiming the pedestrian appeared too late
- A pedestrian stepping into a crosswalk area while the driver alleges they were distracted or traveling too fast for conditions
- Low-light conditions, glare, rain, or debris that affect what was actually visible
- Lane positioning issues—whether the pedestrian was in the driver’s path or within a location where drivers are expected to anticipate pedestrians
Those details matter because insurance companies in Indiana often focus on “what the driver could reasonably see and do,” especially when there’s no obvious eyewitness.


