In a community where people walk to work, run errands, and move between neighborhoods and transit stops, pedestrian injuries frequently involve “ordinary” moments—crossing at the wrong time, a driver turning through a gap, or a vehicle failing to yield when someone is where they’re expected to be.
What makes these cases especially contested locally is that the collision can look clear from your perspective, yet the driver’s account and the insurance adjuster’s narrative may differ on:
- Where you were standing when the driver first noticed you
- Whether the driver had time and distance to stop
- Lighting and weather conditions (fog, rain, snow glare, early darkness)
- Lane position and turning paths on busier streets
Even when the other side “admits something happened,” they may still argue the seriousness of your injuries, the timing of your treatment, or that your actions contributed.


