Many Burien crashes happen in situations that make fault and injury causation harder to prove—especially when the crash occurs quickly and memories don’t match the physical evidence.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Merging and lane-change collisions during commute rushes
- Left-turn disputes at intersections where a motorcyclist’s line of travel is contested
- Sudden braking or stop-and-go traffic where reaction time becomes the issue
- Road surface hazards (potholes, debris, uneven pavement) that can worsen injury outcomes
- Low-visibility conditions (rain, glare, early darkness) that affect what drivers and riders could reasonably see
When the insurer believes the facts are “close,” they often try to resolve the claim early—before medical records fully reflect the severity, treatment course, and functional impact.


