Pedestrian accidents can result in severe injuries and life-altering consequences for victims and their families. When a vehicle strikes a pedestrian, the impact can cause traumatic injuries, mounting medical bills, lost wages, and emotional trauma. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we understand the physical and financial toll these incidents take. Our legal team is dedicated to helping pedestrian accident victims in Kittitas, Washington pursue fair compensation from responsible parties. We handle every aspect of your case with compassion and determination.
Having experienced legal representation after a pedestrian accident is crucial for protecting your rights and maximizing your recovery. Insurance companies often attempt to minimize settlements or shift blame to victims. A qualified attorney ensures your voice is heard and your injuries are properly valued. We handle negotiations, documentation, and court proceedings, allowing you to focus on healing. Our firm’s knowledge of Washington traffic laws, liability standards, and damage calculations ensures you receive appropriate compensation. By choosing professional representation, you gain an advocate who understands the complexities of pedestrian accident claims.
Pedestrian accident claims involve proving that another party’s negligence caused your injuries. Under Washington law, drivers must exercise reasonable care to avoid harming pedestrians, including watching for foot traffic and following speed limits. Even if a pedestrian crosses against a signal, the driver may still share liability if they could have avoided the collision. Our attorneys investigate accident scenes, review police reports, collect witness statements, and analyze traffic patterns. We examine vehicle maintenance records and driver history to establish fault patterns. This detailed investigation builds a strong foundation for negotiation or trial.
The failure to exercise reasonable care that results in harm to another person. In pedestrian accidents, negligence occurs when drivers fail to watch for pedestrians, obey traffic signals, or adjust speed for road conditions. Proving negligence requires showing the driver had a duty to be careful, breached that duty, and caused your injuries as a result.
Washington’s legal principle that allows recovery even if you share some responsibility for the accident, as long as you are less than 51 percent at fault. This means pedestrians who jaywalk but are struck by a speeding driver can still recover damages reduced by their percentage of fault.
The monetary compensation awarded to cover your losses from the accident, including medical bills, lost income, and pain and suffering. Economic damages cover quantifiable expenses, while non-economic damages address less tangible harms like emotional distress and reduced quality of life.
The insurance coverage required by Washington law that drivers must carry to pay for injuries they cause to others. When a driver is at fault for a pedestrian accident, their liability insurance typically covers medical expenses and other damages up to policy limits.
If you are physically able after a pedestrian accident, take photos of the accident scene, vehicle damage, your injuries, and traffic conditions. Collect contact information from witnesses who saw the collision occur. Preserve any physical evidence like torn clothing or broken personal items that demonstrate impact force.
Even if injuries seem minor, obtain medical evaluation promptly after a pedestrian accident. Some injuries like concussions and internal bleeding develop symptoms hours or days after impact. Complete medical documentation establishes the connection between the accident and your injuries, supporting your claim.
Insurance companies often contact accident victims to obtain statements that minimize claim value. Without legal representation, victims may inadvertently say things that harm their cases. Allow your attorney to handle all insurance communications to protect your rights and maximize your recovery.
When pedestrian accidents cause fractures, spinal cord damage, brain injuries, or amputation, comprehensive legal representation becomes essential. These catastrophic injuries require extensive medical care, ongoing rehabilitation, and permanent lifestyle adjustments. Full legal advocacy ensures all lifetime costs and quality-of-life impacts are properly valued in settlement negotiations or court.
When multiple vehicles are involved or fault is contested, comprehensive investigation and legal strategy become critical. Insurance companies may deny claims or blame pedestrians to avoid payment. Thorough case development with reconstruction specialists and evidence analysis establishes clear liability and protects your interests.
If you sustained minor injuries like bruises or small lacerations and liability is obviously the driver’s fault, a straightforward insurance claim might resolve quickly. Clear surveillance footage or multiple credible witnesses can support simple liability determinations. Still, consulting an attorney ensures you do not accept inadequate compensation.
Some insurers promptly acknowledge fault and offer reasonable settlement amounts without dispute. If medical expenses are fully documented and loss calculations are straightforward, rapid resolution becomes possible. However, attorney review ensures settlement amounts adequately cover all present and future costs.
Pedestrians struck by vehicles at intersections often suffer severe injuries due to higher speeds and impact force. Traffic signal violations, distracted driving, and failure to yield frequently cause these collisions.
Even when pedestrians follow traffic signals and use marked crosswalks, drivers sometimes fail to see them or intentionally ignore crossing signals. These accidents reveal clear driver negligence and support strong liability cases.
When drivers flee accident scenes, uninsured motorist coverage or victim compensation funds may provide recovery assistance. Our firm investigates thoroughly to identify and locate responsible drivers when possible.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd combines personal attention with aggressive advocacy for pedestrian accident victims throughout Kittitas and surrounding areas. Our attorneys understand the devastating impact pedestrian accidents have on victims’ lives and approach each case with genuine compassion. We provide transparent communication, keeping you informed at every step while handling all legal complexities. Our fee structure is based on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless we secure compensation for you. We invest our own resources in investigation and expert analysis, demonstrating our commitment to winning your case.
Our firm’s reputation for thorough preparation and successful outcomes makes us a respected advocate for injured pedestrians. We have secured substantial settlements and verdicts against major insurance companies and at-fault drivers. Our knowledge of Washington personal injury law, combined with local court experience, provides strategic advantages in your claim. We negotiate aggressively while remaining professional, and we are prepared to take cases to trial when necessary. Choosing our firm means selecting attorneys who prioritize your recovery and fight relentlessly for full compensation.
Washington law provides a three-year statute of limitations for filing personal injury lawsuits, including pedestrian accident claims. This means you have three years from the accident date to file a lawsuit against the at-fault driver or their insurance company. However, it is important not to wait until the deadline approaches, as evidence can disappear and witnesses’ memories fade over time. We recommend contacting an attorney as soon as possible after your accident to ensure all evidence is properly preserved and collected. Early legal involvement also allows us to begin settlement negotiations promptly while medical treatment is ongoing. Starting your case immediately gives us the best opportunity to build a strong claim and pursue maximum compensation on your behalf.
Pedestrian accident victims can recover both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages include all quantifiable losses such as medical expenses, surgical costs, rehabilitation therapy, prescription medications, medical equipment, lost wages while recovering, and diminished earning capacity if injuries prevent return to previous employment. We also recover costs for ongoing care, home modifications, and transportation needs resulting from your injuries. Non-economic damages compensate for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, scarring and disfigurement, and reduced quality of life. Washington courts recognize that serious injuries cause significant emotional and physical toll beyond financial losses. Our attorneys ensure all categories of damages are properly valued and included in settlement demands or trial presentations.
Yes. Washington follows a comparative fault rule that allows pedestrian accident victims to recover compensation even if they share some responsibility for the accident. As long as you are less than 51 percent at fault, you can pursue a claim against the more-responsible party. Your recovery amount is simply reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you jaywalked but the driver was speeding and could have avoided striking you, you might be 20 percent at fault and recover 80 percent of your damages. This comparative fault rule is beneficial to pedestrians because drivers have a duty to avoid pedestrians even when they are jaywalking or crossing improperly. Our attorneys argue that drivers must be alert and prepared to react to pedestrians, regardless of pedestrian behavior. We analyze fault carefully to minimize your attributed responsibility and maximize your recovery.
Fault in pedestrian accidents is determined through investigation of accident circumstances, driver conduct, traffic laws, and pedestrian behavior. Police accident reports, witness statements, traffic camera footage, and physical evidence all help establish what happened. Our attorneys examine whether the driver was speeding, distracted, impaired, or violating traffic signals. We also consider weather conditions, visibility, road design, and whether the pedestrian was using designated crosswalks or following traffic signals. Accident reconstruction specialists can determine vehicle speeds, impact angles, and whether drivers could have avoided the collision through reasonable defensive driving. Medical evidence sometimes indicates injury patterns consistent with specific impact scenarios. By combining all available evidence, we build clear pictures of driver negligence and establish strong liability to support settlement negotiations or trial.
Immediately after a pedestrian accident, prioritize your safety and health. If you are able to move safely, step away from traffic and call emergency services if you or anyone else needs medical attention. Always seek medical evaluation even if you feel relatively unharmed, as some serious injuries develop symptoms over hours or days. Provide police with honest statements about what you remember, and request a police report number for your records. Collect information from the driver including name, phone number, address, insurance company, and policy number. Take photos of vehicle damage, scene conditions, traffic signals, and your visible injuries if possible. Obtain contact information from witnesses. Avoid discussing fault with the driver or accepting cash settlements at the scene. Contact our office promptly so we can investigate the accident while evidence remains fresh and secure your legal rights.
The value of your pedestrian accident case depends on several factors including injury severity, required medical treatment, lost wages, permanent disability, and impact on quality of life. Minor injuries with clear liability might settle for several thousand dollars, while catastrophic injuries causing permanent disability could justify settlements or verdicts reaching hundreds of thousands of dollars or more. We analyze comparable cases to develop realistic valuation estimates. Our attorneys review your medical records, employment history, and accident circumstances to calculate appropriate damage amounts. We consider current medical expenses plus future care costs, lost income, diminished earning capacity, and pain and suffering. Insurance company settlement offers are evaluated against these calculations to ensure they adequately compensate all your losses. If settlements are unreasonably low, we prepare for trial to let juries assess case value.
Most pedestrian accident cases settle before trial through negotiation with insurance companies or at-fault parties. Settlement allows faster resolution and compensation without courtroom uncertainty. However, when insurance companies offer inadequate settlements or refuse to acknowledge liability, we prepare aggressively for trial. Our attorneys have substantial courtroom experience presenting injury cases to juries effectively. We are prepared to take your case to trial if necessary to secure fair compensation. The trial process involves presenting evidence, witness testimony, and arguments before a judge or jury. We prepare thoroughly with evidence examination, witness preparation, and legal strategy development. Most cases settle during negotiation or mediation phases when presented with strong evidence and compelling arguments. Your case direction depends on insurance company cooperation and damage assessment fairness.
Pedestrian accident claim timelines vary based on injury severity, liability complexity, and insurance company responsiveness. Simple cases with obvious liability and minor injuries might resolve within two to four months. More serious injuries requiring ongoing treatment may take six months to a year while we ensure all medical treatment is complete and damages are fully documented. Complex cases with multiple parties or disputed liability can extend longer as investigation and negotiation proceed. We work efficiently to move cases forward while ensuring nothing is overlooked or undervalued. During this time, you can focus on healing while our firm handles all legal work, investigation, evidence collection, and negotiations. The length matters less than securing maximum compensation for your losses. We maintain regular communication and keep you informed of case progress.
Yes, you should report the pedestrian accident to police as soon as possible and request a written police report. The report documents officer observations, witness statements, and initial liability determinations that support your claim. Police reports provide authoritative accident documentation that insurance companies respect. Additionally, some jurisdictions require accident reporting for insurance purposes. Always provide truthful information to police and avoid admitting fault or accepting blame. Even if police do not initially fault the driver, our investigation can establish liability through additional evidence. Police reports are often incomplete and sometimes overlook important details. Our attorneys use reports as starting points and investigate further with expert analysis, additional witnesses, and physical evidence examination. Having a police report establishes the accident occurred and creates official documentation supporting your claim.
If the driver who hit you was uninsured, your own insurance policy’s uninsured motorist coverage becomes crucial. This coverage compensates you for injuries caused by uninsured drivers. Washington law requires drivers to carry uninsured motorist coverage or explicitly decline it in writing. We handle claims with your own insurance company, which typically covers medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering up to your policy limits. If the uninsured driver can be identified, we pursue claims directly against them to recover beyond insurance limits. We also explore other potential compensation sources such as government victim compensation programs. Even if the driver was uninsured, you should not go without compensation for your injuries. Our firm vigorously pursues all available recovery options to ensure you receive maximum compensation.
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