In many Richfield cases, the dispute isn’t whether a pedestrian was injured—it’s what happened in the moments before impact. Local patterns we see include:
- Turning-vehicle conflicts at multi-lane intersections and signalized crossings
- Low-visibility conditions during Minnesota winters (snow glare, slushy windshields, shorter daylight)
- Construction and traffic pattern changes that affect sightlines and driver behavior
- Commute traffic where vehicles are accelerating, changing lanes, or making late turns
These details matter because insurance adjusters often question timing, visibility, and “who had the chance to avoid the crash.” A lawyer’s job is to turn the scene into proof.


