After a disputed New Orleans intersection crash, we identify what can prove signal timing, vehicle position, witness accounts, and insurer fault pressure.
Last reviewed: April 21, 2026
Editorial review note: On the above date, we checked the Louisiana Legislature and the City of New Orleans/NOPD source pages for the source-sensitive information used here.
Authored by: Stephen Babcock, Louisiana injury lawyer
An intersection crash claim often depends on more than who says the light was green. A New Orleans intersection accident lawyer helps preserve camera footage, compare vehicle positions, identify witnesses, obtain the crash report, and frame right-of-way disputes before insurers lock onto an easy story. We focus early on signal timing, left turns, impact angles, treatment records, wage loss, and fault allocation.
Intersection cases often become fault disputes because each driver may claim they had the light, the right of way, or no time to react. The same signal and impact evidence may also matter when the person hurt was walking, biking, or hit by a turning driver, which can connect the claim to a pedestrian accident or bicycle accident.
- Whether the dispute centers on signal color, protected or permissive turns, stop signs, travel path, or witness point of view.
- If NOPD handled the crash, accident-report requests may involve the City’s police-report request process or Records and Identification at 1615 Poydras St.
- Nearby business, traffic, and dash-camera video may be overwritten before the insurer finishes its review.
- Medical treatment timing, missed work, vehicle damage, and photos help connect the collision sequence to the losses.
- Recorded statements can create problems when the adjuster asks about a yellow light before the signal evidence is secured.
Chase kept me up to date, informed and answered any and all questions i had along the way.
Dakota Liles, Google review, April 2024
How can a New Orleans intersection accident lawyer prove fault?
Fault proof usually starts with the order of events: where each vehicle came from, whether a turn arrow or red light controlled the movement, what each driver could see, and whether an outside record supports one story over another. For the larger crash file—coverage, medical bills, rental issues, and claim timing—our New Orleans car accident attorney guide covers the wider motor-vehicle process. In intersection claims, our attention stays on signal-specific proof.
| Proof source | What it can clarify | Why timing matters |
|---|---|---|
| Signal phase or control pattern | Whether a protected turn, red light, yellow transition, or stop sign matched the driver’s stories. | Signal data and camera feeds may not be stored for long. |
| Business, traffic, or dash-camera video | Vehicle paths, turn movement, impact location, and what happened immediately before contact. | Private systems often overwrite footage before an insurer completes review. |
| Witness names and contact details | What an independent person saw from a sidewalk, nearby car, storefront, or bus stop. | Witnesses can become hard to locate once the scene clears. |
| Vehicle damage, photos, and tow records | Point of impact, force direction, airbag deployment, and whether the physical evidence matches the claim. | Repairs, salvage, or storage changes can erase useful details. |
| Crash report and officer notes | Driver identities, insurance information, citations, diagrams, and statements gathered close in time. | The report may help, but civil fault often requires more than the ticket decision alone. |
Why intersection crashes draw blame-shifting
Intersection cases invite quick blame because both drivers may claim they had the light, the right of way, or no safe chance to stop. One driver may insist the light was yellow. Another may point to the lack of a citation. An adjuster may turn those uncertainties into a shared-fault argument before the full record is collected.
We look for facts that either support or undermine each story: turn angle, stopping distance, impact point, roadway markings, witness location, pre-crash speed, and whether a driver had time to react. The goal is not to guess better than the insurer. The goal is to build a record strong enough that the insurer cannot treat missing evidence as a reason to discount the claim.
Louisiana rules that can affect a disputed intersection claim
Louisiana negligence law starts with La. C.C. art. 2315, which ties damages to fault, then moves to fault allocation and crash-specific proof. For crashes on or after January 1, 2026, La. C.C. art. 2323 can bar recovery when the injured person is 51% or more at fault, and below that level, it can reduce damages in proportion to fault. That makes every signal-timing, right-of-way, and visibility detail important.
La. R.S. 32:398 also matters in injury or over-$500 property-damage crashes because it addresses notice to local police, crash reports, report contents, and who may obtain reports. La. C.C. art. 3493.1 gives most delictual actions a two-year liberative prescription that runs from the day injury or damage is sustained. We use those rules together with our guides to Louisiana comparative fault, evidence preservation, and damages and insurance when the facts call for deeper analysis.
How we help with signal timing, witnesses, and insurer pressure
We begin by mapping the intersection, the vehicle movements, the reporting agency, and the adjuster’s stated reason for denying or discounting fault. Then we work backward to the records that can still be saved: photos, video, repair files, tow records, witness contact information, medical chronology, lost-income proof, and communications with the insurer.
When a specific crash cause changes the evidence, we narrow the investigation. Phone-based proof may matter in a texting and driving crash. Inattention, passengers, devices, or outside distractions may point toward a distracted driving claim. Approach speed, skid marks, and impact severity may be central in a speeding accident case.
What can be at stake after a disputed-fault intersection crash
Intersection crashes can cause T-bone and side-impact injuries, surgery or rehabilitation needs, missed work, vehicle-total-loss fights, and out-of-pocket costs while the insurer debates fault. A percentage-point fault dispute can also affect recovery under Louisiana comparative-fault rules, which is why early proof work matters even when the other driver seems clearly responsible.
One approved published motor-vehicle result that fits this family is a $950,000 New Orleans area car wreck settlement. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome, and every claim depends on its own facts, insurance coverage, injuries, and proof.
What you get on the first call
On the first call, we usually ask where the vehicles were, which direction each driver was traveling, whether anyone saw the signal phase, where cameras may be, what treatment has started, and whether an adjuster has requested a recorded statement. You can call or text (504) 313-5000, and we can tell you what to save first, what to avoid saying, and whether the sequence evidence needs urgent preservation.
We can also explain our contingency-fee arrangement, including no recovery, no fee, and no costs under the written agreement. The first review should leave you with a clearer proof plan, not just a general warning to be careful with insurance.
We serve New Orleans clients by phone, text, video, and in-person meetings when needed. New Orleans matters may involve the Orleans Parish Civil District Court, NOPD records, local medical providers, and insurers handling claims in Orleans Parish.
Frequently Asked Questions
Click a question to expand
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How long do I have to file a Louisiana intersection crash claim?
La. C.C. art. 3493.1 gives most delictual injury claims a two-year prescriptive period running from the day injury or damage is sustained. Some facts can change the analysis, so deadline review should happen early.
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What if the insurer says I was partly at fault?
Shared fault is common in intersection disputes. For crashes on or after January 1, 2026, Louisiana’s comparative-fault rule can bar recovery at 51% or more fault and reduce recovery below that level, so signal and witness proof can be decisive.
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Should I give a recorded statement after an intersection collision?
Do not guess about the light, speed, distance, or timing just because an adjuster asks. We usually want to review the crash report, photos, video possibilities, and treatment status before any detailed recorded statement.
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What if I did not get medical treatment the same day?
A same-day visit can help, but a delayed visit does not automatically defeat the claim. The key is whether medical records can connect the symptoms, timing, and treatment to the crash rather than a later event.
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What damages may be available after a New Orleans intersection crash?
Damages may include medical expenses, future care, lost wages, lost earning ability, pain and suffering, vehicle loss, and other supported costs. The value depends on injury proof, insurance coverage, fault allocation, and how well the record is built.
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What does it cost to hire an intersection crash lawyer?
We handle injury cases on a contingency fee, meaning attorney fees and case costs are addressed under the written fee agreement and depend on recovery. We explain that agreement before representation begins.