Westbury is a suburban community where many people commute, run errands, and cross near intersections and retail corridors. That means pedestrian injuries often come from predictable, repeatable moments:
- crossing between parked cars or near curb lines
- entering crosswalks while drivers are turning or changing lanes
- night or low-light visibility issues
- construction or temporary traffic patterns that change how drivers see pedestrians
- vehicles failing to yield when traffic is congested and attention is divided
In Westbury, insurers frequently argue about what the pedestrian “should have done” and whether the driver had a clear opportunity to stop. The best cases usually focus on what the driver could see, what the pedestrian was doing, and whether the crash scene supports that story.


