Robinson sits in a region where people commonly drive fast along commuting corridors and where traffic patterns change throughout the day—school hours, shift changes, and weekend errands. Those patterns can matter in pedestrian cases because they affect:
- Driver attention and speed in high-activity windows
- Visibility at intersections, turning lanes, and edges of roadways
- When pedestrians are expected to be present (crosswalk areas, school-adjacent routes, common walking corridors)
- How quickly evidence is lost—dash footage, surveillance, and scene details can disappear fast
Even if the crash feels obvious, insurers often dispute timing, visibility, or whether the driver took reasonable action to avoid the collision.


