Seymour sits in a corridor where passenger traffic and commercial freight regularly overlap. That mix creates crash patterns we see again and again:
- High-speed merges and lane changes when cars and trucks funnel between local streets and major routes
- Stop-and-go congestion around busy retail areas and commuting hours, where rear-end impacts can be severe when a truck is behind a smaller vehicle
- Long-haul drivers passing through who may be unfamiliar with local intersections, signals, or traffic flow
Even a “routine” impact can cause serious harm when the other vehicle is a loaded tractor-trailer or a large box truck. And because the trucking side often has formal reporting chains, important information can be created—and controlled—by the company within hours of the crash.


