In a smaller borough/suburban setting like Westwood, it’s common for accidents to happen in environments where multiple details matter:
- Curbside pickups and drop-offs where a passenger may be stepping from the curb, near a crosswalk, or between parked cars.
- Commuter traffic and stop-and-go congestion that affects speed, braking distance, and visibility.
- Pedestrian and bicycle activity on local streets where drivers may need extra awareness for sudden crossings.
- Multi-driver scenes (rear-end collisions, side-impact crashes, or chain reactions) that create conflicting accounts.
After an Uber or Lyft crash, you may hear different versions of events—especially once insurance adjusters begin requesting statements, photos, and timelines. The early phase matters: what you say (and what you don’t document) can affect liability arguments later.


