In a lot of local cases, the dispute isn’t really about whether a crash happened—it’s about who caused it and what each party was responsible for at the moment of impact.
Common Sterling Heights scenarios include:
- Intersection collisions where a driver claims they had the right of way, but braking distance and lane positioning tell a different story.
- Construction-area rear-end crashes where traffic patterns change quickly and drivers may be blamed for “not adapting.”
- Pickup/drop-off disputes near busy commercial corridors, where a passenger says they were moving toward the vehicle (or stepping away) and the driver argues otherwise.
- Shift-time traffic (evenings and weekends) where fatigue and congestion can make “reasonable driving” a central issue.
In rideshare cases, these disputes can involve more than two people: the rider, the rideshare driver, other motorists, and the insurance carriers trying to limit payout.


