
Chain-Reaction Rear-End Crashes on I-5: How Oregon Fault Rules Work for the Middle Car
If you were hit from behind and pushed into another car, fault is not automatic. Learn how Oregon law, evidence, and insurance rules affect who pays.

If you were hit from behind and pushed into another car, fault is not automatic. Learn how Oregon law, evidence, and insurance rules affect who pays.

Highway collisions produce higher forces, more complex injuries, and tougher legal questions. Learn how Oregon claims are valued—and how to protect yours.

A comprehensive Oregon guide to roundabout right-of-way, lane rules, evidence collection, and insurer disputes after a crash.

For litigators, “training” is not a neutral descriptor. It can reshape fault analysis, revive assumption-of-risk logic, and tip Oregon’s 51% bar.

Oregon law puts a high duty on left turns, but fault can shift when the through driver speeds, runs a red light, or acts negligently.

Calling your run “training” can change how insurers and juries view fault. Learn how Oregon’s 51% rule makes word choice critical for injured runners.
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