Lincoln Park is a town where daily commutes, school-area travel, and routine errands all put pedestrians in the path of turning vehicles. Many disputes we see after strikes aren’t about whether someone was hurt—they’re about what the driver should have done and what the pedestrian could reasonably expect in that moment.
In New Jersey, fault can be shared, and insurers may push narratives that minimize driver responsibility or suggest the injury is unrelated. That’s why the “small details” matter so much: sightlines, timing at intersections, vehicle speed for conditions, and whether the scene reflects what people say happened.


