Allentown’s mix of downtown intersections, busier commuting corridors, and neighborhood shopping areas increases the odds of disputes over what the driver could see and when they should have stopped.
In real cases, the conflict usually isn’t whether you were hurt—it’s what the driver did in the seconds before impact, such as:
- A turning vehicle cutting across your path
- A missed yield at a crosswalk or at the edge of a marked pedestrian crossing
- Late braking when traffic conditions changed
- Confusion about signals, lane placement, or where the pedestrian entered the roadway
- Poor visibility from weather, glare, construction activity, or street lighting
When insurers try to narrow liability, they often point to “inconsistencies” in early statements. That’s why the first days after a crash matter.


