Altus traffic often mixes commuting routes with daily errands, school schedules, and drivers who may be focused on faster travel times. Rideshare injuries commonly come from:
- Rear-end crashes on stop-and-go stretches (sudden braking can cause neck/back injuries)
- Side-impact collisions near intersections where visibility changes quickly
- Lane changes and merging near higher-traffic corridors
- Night rides tied to events or work shifts, where lighting and reaction time become issues
- Parking-lot or pickup-area incidents, including slips/falls during busy loading/unloading
The legal takeaway: in Altus, the “story” insurers push sometimes tries to minimize what happened or shift blame to “driver error” without addressing how the ride context and crash dynamics fit together. Your lawyer’s job is to connect the accident mechanics to the injuries in a way that holds up.


