In a suburban community like Floral Park, drivers may be focused on normal routines—turning into traffic, pulling out of parking areas, or accelerating after slowing for a busier intersection. Pedestrians, meanwhile, are often dealing with crosswalk timing, curb cuts, and the practical reality of crossing when you “think you have time.”
That’s why many disputes in Nassau County pedestrian claims come down to:
- Line of sight (parked vehicles, landscaping, glare, or nighttime lighting)
- Driver reaction time (could the driver have avoided the crash with reasonable attention?)
- Where the first contact occurred (crosswalk vs. curb line vs. near a driveway/turn-in area)
- What traffic controls were actually in place at the moment of impact
These details aren’t academic—they directly affect fault arguments and what evidence becomes most persuasive.


