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Pedestrian Safety

Connecticut Pedestrian Safety and Your Legal Rights After Being Struck

Pedestrian fatalities have climbed in Connecticut, and walkers struck by vehicles have important legal rights to compensation.

The Rising Risk to Pedestrians

Pedestrian injuries and deaths have increased across Connecticut, especially in dense urban areas. Because Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar, the details here directly affect what an injured person can recover. Our network attorneys see these situations regularly across the state.

In Connecticut, this carries added weight because of the state's dense highway network, mix of urban and shoreline communities, and specific injury statutes. Understanding how it applies to your situation can make a meaningful difference in both your recovery and your peace of mind.

Connecticut's Strengthened Crosswalk Law

A recent update requires drivers to stop for pedestrians signaling an intent to cross, not just slow down. Because Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar, the details here directly affect what an injured person can recover. Our network attorneys see these situations regularly across the state.

In Connecticut, this carries added weight because of the state's dense highway network, mix of urban and shoreline communities, and specific injury statutes. Understanding how it applies to your situation can make a meaningful difference in both your recovery and your peace of mind.

Common Causes of Pedestrian Strikes

Failure to yield, distraction, speeding, and poor nighttime visibility cause most pedestrian crashes. In Connecticut, this carries added weight because of the state's dense highway network, mix of urban and shoreline communities, and specific injury statutes. Understanding how it applies to your situation can make a meaningful difference in both your recovery and your peace of mind.

From Fairfield County to the Quiet Corner, injured Connecticut residents face these questions every day. Knowing your rights — and acting before deadlines pass — is the single best way to protect your claim.

Injuries Pedestrians Suffer

With no protection, pedestrians often suffer fractures, internal injuries, and traumatic brain injuries. In Connecticut, this carries added weight because of the state's dense highway network, mix of urban and shoreline communities, and specific injury statutes. Understanding how it applies to your situation can make a meaningful difference in both your recovery and your peace of mind.

Because Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar, the details here directly affect what an injured person can recover. Our network attorneys see these situations regularly across the state.

Determining Fault

Comparative negligence may apply, but drivers bear a strong duty to watch for and yield to pedestrians. In Connecticut, this carries added weight because of the state's dense highway network, mix of urban and shoreline communities, and specific injury statutes. Understanding how it applies to your situation can make a meaningful difference in both your recovery and your peace of mind.

Because Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar, the details here directly affect what an injured person can recover. Our network attorneys see these situations regularly across the state.

Recovering Compensation

Victims may recover medical costs, lost income, and pain and suffering through the driver's insurance and their own UM/UIM coverage. Connecticut's laws and local conditions shape how this plays out in practice. Getting informed guidance early helps you avoid costly missteps and protect the full value of any claim you may have.

Because Connecticut follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 51% bar, the details here directly affect what an injured person can recover. Our network attorneys see these situations regularly across the state.

Have questions about your own situation? Get a free, confidential case review. You pay no fee unless you win. Call 973-566-5599.

This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. For guidance on your specific situation, consult a licensed Connecticut attorney.

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