Liberty traffic patterns create predictable risk points. Drivers may be focused on turning lanes, pedestrians may appear briefly near curb lines, and lighting can change quickly across neighborhoods and commercial strips.
In many local cases, the dispute isn’t whether someone was hit—it’s whether the driver could reasonably have avoided the collision. That often depends on:
- Sight lines at the moment the pedestrian entered the roadway
- Signal timing and whether the crosswalk was in use
- Turning behavior (especially when vehicles cut across pedestrian paths)
- Weather and lighting, including glare and darker evening conditions
- Construction or lane shifts, which can move drivers’ attention away from crosswalk areas
A strong Liberty pedestrian case usually starts with reconstructing what happened in real time: where you were standing, how long the driver had to react, and what conditions affected visibility.


