Many drivers assume a pedestrian case is “simple” once the police report is filed. In reality, adjusters frequently dispute details like:
- What the driver could see and when (lighting, turning angles, traffic flow, and sight lines)
- Whether a driver yielded appropriately at a crossing or where the pedestrian entered the roadway
- How the crash happened in sequence—especially when there’s no clear video
- Whether injuries match the impact (a common tactic when symptoms don’t peak until days later)
In Cedar Falls, where people walk for errands, campus-area commuting, and everyday life, these fact disputes matter. A strong case is less about assumptions and more about proving what happened—and linking it to medical records.


