Middletown is a working community with regular commuting patterns and traffic flow that can be hard to judge—especially near busier roadways, intersections, and areas where people walk to work, school, or errands.
In pedestrian cases, disputes often come down to questions like:
- Did the driver see you in time to stop?
- Was the driver turning and should have yielded to pedestrians?
- Was the driver traveling too fast for traffic conditions?
- Were there visibility issues (darkness, glare, lane changes, construction zones, or blocked sightlines)?
Even when a driver “should have” noticed you, insurance adjusters may still argue the pedestrian entered the roadway suddenly or that the injuries are unrelated. That’s why the early evidence matters.


