While every case is different, Norfolk-area crashes often share practical features that affect liability and documentation:
- Commute timing collisions: Injuries after late-afternoon or evening rides when traffic is dense and drivers are more likely to brake suddenly.
- Intersection and turning crashes: Side impacts when a rideshare vehicle is turning, merging, or navigating intersections with heavier vehicle flow.
- Nighttime event rides: Collisions involving fatigue, distracted driving, or reduced visibility—especially when riders are getting home after local gatherings.
- Residential street impacts: Lower-speed crashes that still cause significant soft-tissue injuries when people don’t realize symptoms may worsen over the next days.
Because these scenarios are common, insurers often try to minimize claims by focusing on “minor” property damage or short-term symptoms. A lawyer’s job is to connect your medical records to the crash and challenge unsupported assumptions.


