Auto Accident Law covers legal issues arising from car, truck, motorcycle, and pedestrian crashes, including determining fault, dealing with insurance claims, and pursuing compensation for medical bills, lost wages, property damage, and pain and suffering. It also addresses deadlines, evidence, settlement negotiations, and when to file a personal injury lawsuit.
Colorado uses a modified comparative negligence rule in Denver traffic accidents: you can recover damages only if you’re less than 50% at fault, and your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. Insurers, police reports, and crash evidence are used to assign fault, and even small findings of shared responsibility can significantly affect compensation. […]
Florida requires drivers to carry at least $10,000 in PIP and $10,000 in property damage liability—yet many Miami-Dade crashes still involve uninsured motorists. If you’re hit by an uninsured driver, you may still recover compensation through your own coverages and, in some cases, a lawsuit against the at-fault driver. This article explains the step-by-step claim […]
After a Colorado Springs car accident, take six key steps: get medical care, call police, document the scene, exchange and preserve information, avoid admitting fault, and report the claim promptly. These actions help protect your health, strengthen evidence, and reduce insurance disputes under Colorado law. This article explains each step and why Colorado Springs auto […]