Bicycle Accidents matters in Angels Camp
Bicycle Crashes in the Calaveras County Foothills
The Gold Country roads around Angels Camp attract cyclists drawn to the climbs and scenery of the Mother Lode. Highway 49 through town and the foothill routes toward Murphys and the Highway 4 grade offer challenging, beautiful riding. But these roads were built for an earlier era, with narrow shoulders, blind curves, and rolling terrain that can hide a cyclist from an approaching driver until it is nearly too late. Add tourist traffic that does not know the roads, weekend crowds during the Calaveras County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee, and the speed differential between a bicycle and a car, and the danger to riders is significant.
Many bicycle crashes here come down to a driver who failed to share the road: passing too close, turning across a rider's path, or simply not looking before pulling out. Because a cyclist has so little protection, even a low-speed impact can cause fractures, head injuries, or worse. On a remote foothill road, emergency help may be far away, and serious trauma can require transport beyond Mark Twain Medical Center in San Andreas to a trauma center down the hill.
Holding Drivers Accountable
Insurers often try to blame the cyclist, suggesting the rider was not visible or was riding where they should not have been. We reject that reflex and build the facts: California law entitles cyclists to the road, and we use scene evidence, vehicle data, witness statements, and reconstruction to show how the collision really happened. Where a road defect, debris, or poor maintenance contributed, we examine whether a public entity shares responsibility, which carries strict deadlines under California law.
We document your injuries and losses with care and honesty, never inflating anything. Cycling injuries can mean long recoveries, surgeries, and lasting limitations, and we make sure your medical records, lost income, and future needs are fully reflected so an insurer cannot quietly discount what happened to you.
Where Your Case Is Handled
A bicycle injury lawsuit from the Angels Camp area would generally be filed at the Calaveras County Superior Court in San Andreas, a short drive north on Highway 49. Most claims resolve through negotiation, but we prepare each case as if it will be tried, because that is what insurers respect. From our Glendale base we manage the investigation, filings, and carrier communications so the distance never becomes your problem.
Free Consultation for Injured Cyclists
Speaking with us costs nothing, and there is no fee unless we recover for you. We will explain how California law applies to your crash and what deadlines you face, in English, Armenian, or Russian.
Our attorney
How Mihran M. Ghazaryan helps with bicycle accidents
Mihran M. Ghazaryan documents the bike-specific facts insurers prefer to ignore — door-zone collisions, unsafe passing, and right-hook turns — and counters the reflexive assumption that the cyclist was at fault. He gathers the scene evidence, witness accounts, and medical record that put the claim on solid ground, and handles the insurer directly so you can heal.
Types of bicycle accidents we handle
Door-zone collisions
California Vehicle Code §22517 makes opening a door into traffic the responsibility of the door-opener. We frame these cleanly.
Right-hook and unsafe-merge crashes
Drivers turning across a bike lane without yielding. Lane-position and bike-lane markings are central.
Hit-from-behind crashes
Often the most serious injuries. Visibility analysis and reconstruction matter here as much as in any motor-vehicle case.
Damages
What compensation can cover
Every bicycle accident claim is different, but California law allows injured plaintiffs to seek several categories of damages. We build each one with documentation — medical records, wage statements, expert opinions — so nothing is left on the table.
Medical expenses
Emergency care, hospitalization, surgery, rehabilitation, and the future treatment your providers say you'll need.
Lost wages
Income you lost while recovering — and, where the injury affects your ability to work, diminished future earning capacity.
Pain and suffering
Compensation for physical pain, emotional distress, and the ways the injury has changed how you live day to day.
Property damage
Repair or replacement of your vehicle and other property damaged in the incident.
Out-of-pocket costs
Transportation to appointments, medical equipment, household help, and the other expenses an injury forces on you.
How we work
- 1
Free, no-pressure consultation
We listen first. We answer your questions. There is no fee for the initial conversation — and you decide whether to engage us at the end of it.
- 2
Investigation and evidence preservation
Police reports, scene photos, witness statements, vehicle data, surveillance video, medical records. The earlier we collect, the harder it is for the other side to reshape the story later.
- 3
Treatment, demand, and negotiation
We coordinate with your providers, document the full extent of damages — medical, lost income, pain — and present a demand backed by evidence. We push back firmly when an insurer lowballs.
- 4
Litigation when necessary
Most matters settle. When an insurer refuses to be reasonable, we file. Preparing every case as if it will be tried is what makes the settlement number move.
What to do right away
- Get medical attention — concussion symptoms can take days to appear.
- Photograph the bike's resting position, the lane markings, and the vehicle.
- Save the bike, your helmet, and clothing without cleaning them.
- Identify witnesses; pedestrians and other riders often see what police miss.
- Call us before contacting either insurer.
The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.
Deadlines that matter
Most California personal-injury claims must be filed within two years of the injury (Code of Civil Procedure §335.1). Miss the window and the court will almost always dismiss the case, no matter how strong it is.
Claims against government entities are much shorter — generally a written claim within six months (Government Code §911.2). Crashes involving city vehicles, public buses, or dangerous public-road conditions can fall under this rule.
Exceptions exist in both directions — discovery rules, minors, continuing violations, out-of-state defendants — so don't assume your deadline has passed or that you have time to spare. Call (818) 539-7969 and we'll tell you exactly where you stand.
