Many serious pedestrian crashes in the area involve situations residents recognize from daily life:
- Turning movements near busy corridors (drivers cutting across a pedestrian’s path when they’re focused on traffic flow)
- Crosswalks where lighting or sightlines are limited (night conditions, glare, parked vehicles, or vegetation)
- Commute and shift-change timing (drivers exiting parking areas, school/work traffic surges)
- Sidewalk and curb-edge conflicts (a pedestrian stepping off the curb or into a lane to avoid an obstacle)
- Construction and changing road layouts (temporary signage, lane shifts, and driver confusion)
These patterns matter because insurers frequently argue the pedestrian “appeared suddenly” or that the driver had no realistic chance to stop. Your case needs evidence that addresses that exact dispute.


