Manhattan Beach traffic patterns and street design can make fault harder to prove—especially in the moments leading up to a collision.
Common local friction points include:
- Left-turning drivers and late yields near busy intersections where drivers are focused on cross-traffic and pedestrians.
- Drivers exiting driveways or parking lots who may not anticipate a motorcycle approaching quickly in adjacent lanes.
- Lane changes and slowing traffic around commute hours, when drivers brake suddenly and visibility is reduced.
- Beach-area congestion during peak seasons and events, when drivers are distracted and streets become crowded.
When fault is disputed, settlement value often swings based on evidence quality—not just medical severity. That’s why what happened in the moments before impact matters as much as what happened after.


