On Wednesday night, a pedestrian
was struck as she tried to cross Crane Highway through gaps in
traffic. She was with a group of friends
when she attempted to cross the highway.
A car had just merged onto the southbound portion of the highway when it
struck the girl. As a result of the
impact, the pedestrian was thrown forward and landed in the middle of the
road. She suffered life-threatening head
injuries and remains in serious condition after being transported to Shock
Trauma. The driver of the car was not
injured, and police determined there was no fault on the part of the
driver. The teenage girl tried to cross
the highway without yielding the right of way to oncoming traffic, which is
required when someone is crossing a road outside of any crosswalk. This is commonly known as jaywalking.
Pedestrian
accidents occur on a daily basis throughout Maryland and the rest of the
country. The most important thing to
keep in mind if you or someone you know is injured in a pedestrian accident is
whether you or the person you know was lawfully crossing the road. Lawfully crossing the road means that the
pedestrian was inside of a marked crosswalk and there is a crossing signal
illuminated. If not, and you or someone
you know is crossing outside of a crosswalk or crossing the street when the
signal is telling you not to cross, then you can be found to be contributorily
negligent, which means your actions contributed to the accident and the
resulting injuries. Maryland is a contributory
negligence state, which means that if you are even just 1% negligent in causing
the accident, you cannot recover any compensation for injuries suffered.
There
are so many pedestrian accident cases where a pedestrian is hit by a car, but
the pedestrian was partly at fault because he was texting on his cell phone,
crossing against the signal, or crossing the street where there is no marked
crosswalk. In this circumstances, the
pedestrian cannot recover anything. Nighttime
is the worst for pedestrian accidents because the darkness makes it extremely
difficult for drivers to spot pedestrians.
This accident happened at night, and the pedestrian tried crossing the
street even though she was not in a crosswalk and there were oncoming cars
travelling at a high speed.
If you or a family
member have been injured or killed in a Maryland pedestrian accident and would
like to consult an experienced personal injury attorney for free, contact our
office at (301) 854-9000 to schedule an appointment at one of our office
locations in Annapolis
or throughout Maryland or visit us online at http://www.portnerandshure.com/Personal-Injury/
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