In many Concord-area cases, the dispute isn’t whether an injury occurred—it’s what happened in the seconds leading up to impact. That can be especially true when:
- the location has heavier traffic patterns during commute windows
- visibility changes (sun angle, glare, street lighting, weather)
- there are turning movements at intersections and driveways
- multiple people were present, but only one or two remember the critical timeline
Insurance adjusters frequently focus on inconsistencies: who saw what first, the speed of the vehicle, where the pedestrian was relative to crosswalk markings, and whether any distraction played a role.
A Concord pedestrian injury case should be built around proof—photographs, video, witness accounts, and medical documentation that connects your symptoms to the crash.


