Many pedestrian injuries happen during routine movement—walking to work, heading toward a storefront, or crossing near where traffic naturally slows and starts again.
In North Mankato, disputes frequently come down to details like:
- Turning traffic vs. pedestrian crossing (drivers may claim they “couldn’t see” or that they started the turn when it was clear)
- Weather and visibility (glare on wet streets, snowbank obstruction, and darker winter evenings)
- Construction and changing traffic patterns (temporary signage, altered lane placement, and driver uncertainty)
- Time pressure (drivers and pedestrians moving fast near busy corridors)
Even when you believe the driver is obviously at fault, insurers may still challenge what happened and how your injuries connect to the crash.


