In many pedestrian cases, liability turns into a fact question—not a guess. In Celina, you may see crash patterns connected to:
- Turning and lane changes near busy commuting corridors where drivers are watching traffic flow more than crosswalk activity.
- Construction zones and temporary traffic control that change sightlines, reduce stopping distance, or reroute pedestrians.
- New development traffic as neighborhoods expand and roads evolve faster than local driving habits.
- Night and low-visibility conditions during evening events or later commutes when lighting and driver attention become issues.
Depending on your crash, responsibility can extend beyond the driver to entities involved with roadway design, signage, or traffic-control practices. A careful investigation is what separates a quick denial from a claim that has real leverage.


