Rideshare incidents in Harrison frequently involve fast decision-making: a rider getting in or out quickly, a driver navigating congested areas, or a pedestrian caught in the moments between curbside movement and a vehicle’s turn. Even when the crash seems “simple,” disputes often arise about:
- Whether the driver was on an active trip at the time of impact
- How the vehicle approached or left the curb (especially when traffic is tight)
- What the rider or pedestrian was doing in the seconds before the collision
- Which policy should respond—the driver’s auto insurance, the rideshare coverage, or another driver’s coverage
In New Jersey, those details matter because coverage and fault are not always handled the same way by every insurer. A claim can stall—or weaken—if the timeline isn’t organized and the evidence isn’t preserved quickly.


