Sulphur streets include a mix of residential lanes, busy commuting corridors, and areas where people are walking between destinations—stores, schools, neighborhoods, and nearby work routes. In real cases, the “why it happened” often comes down to timing and attention:
- Late braking at turning points (drivers cutting across a pedestrian’s path while looking for traffic)
- Visibility problems from weather, headlights at night, or glare
- Construction and lane shifts that change where pedestrians are walking and where drivers expect them
- High-traffic periods connected to local commuting patterns and shift work
- Tourist and event traffic that increases unfamiliar-driver risk in certain areas
When the crash involves a turning maneuver, lane change, or confusing roadway layout, the case usually turns on how well the evidence captures what a “reasonable driver” should have seen.


