In smaller Indiana cities, many people commute through the same corridors for work, school, and errands. That means pedestrian incidents can involve:
- Same-route familiarity (drivers may assume they “know what happened”)
- Busy turn points where drivers merge or turn across pedestrian paths
- Variable visibility during early morning and late afternoon (headlights, glare, darker side streets)
- Construction and resurfacing that changes how people cross and how drivers see
When a case involves disputes about timing—like whether a driver had time to stop, or whether the pedestrian was in a crosswalk or roadway—your early documentation matters a lot.


