Justice is surrounded by high-volume routes where trucks are common, and many collisions happen during everyday routines—morning commutes, school drop-offs, or quick trips to nearby shopping and service areas. In practice, that means:
- More merging and lane-change conflicts near highway access points and busy intersections
- Stop-and-go traffic where a loaded truck needs far more distance to brake
- Commercial spillover onto local roads, especially when drivers reroute around congestion
These patterns matter because the “how” of the crash often determines what evidence exists (traffic cameras, nearby business video, 911 timelines) and which insurer or company ends up responsible.


