Bellefontaine Neighbors is a place where everyday travel is close—school routes, errands, and commuting patterns that can put pedestrians in the path of turning vehicles. In many local cases, disputes don’t turn on “whether someone was hit,” but on timing and visibility:
- Turning traffic disputes: Drivers claim they looked but didn’t see you soon enough, especially when a pedestrian appears suddenly from a curb edge or between parked vehicles.
- Low-light visibility: Missouri winters and early evenings can reduce sightlines. Headlights glare, shadows, and wet pavement can all affect what a driver “should have” noticed.
- Roadway clutter and line-of-sight issues: Signage, street furniture, and nearby vehicles can create the kind of obstruction that insurers later argue was unavoidable.
- Comparative fault arguments: Even if you were in a crosswalk or on a sidewalk-adjacent route, insurers may argue you “could have waited” or “walked into traffic.”
Our job is to separate what’s assumed from what’s provable—so your claim reflects the real scene, not the insurer’s preferred narrative.


