Brighton sits in the path of steady commercial movement—local deliveries, construction traffic, and regional freight. That mix can create patterns we frequently see after serious truck wrecks:
- Stop-and-go congestion meeting heavy vehicles: Commuter traffic can change speed quickly, and trucks need more distance to brake.
- Work-zone and growth-area driving: New development and road projects can mean lane shifts, temporary signage, and uneven shoulders.
- Fleet and contractor vehicles: You may be dealing with layered business relationships (carrier, contractor, subcontractor, leasing company), not just one driver.
Even when the crash seems “obvious,” companies may argue the truck driver was an independent contractor, blame a third-party maintenance vendor, or point to a shipper/loader. We focus on building a clear, documented story early—before it gets rewritten by the defense.


