Motorcycle Accidents matters in Roseville
Riding Hazards Around Roseville
Motorcyclists in Roseville share the road with heavy commuter traffic on Interstate 80 and Highway 65, where left-turning cars and lane-changing drivers create the classic dangers riders fear most. Surface arteries like Douglas Boulevard, Sunrise Avenue, and Pleasant Grove Boulevard carry fast-moving traffic through busy intersections, and the foothill routes that riders enjoy on weekends bring blind curves and unexpected gravel. A driver who simply does not look before turning across a rider's path can cause life-altering injuries.
Because a motorcyclist's body is exposed, even a low-speed collision can produce road rash, broken bones, joint damage, and traumatic brain injuries. Helmets save lives but cannot prevent every serious harm, and California's universal helmet law means insurers rarely have a foothold there.
Overcoming the Bias Against Riders
Insurance adjusters often assume the motorcyclist was speeding or riding recklessly, and they use that bias to discount or deny valid claims. Attorney Ghazaryan counters those assumptions with hard evidence: scene photographs, witness statements, vehicle data, and accident reconstruction when needed. California follows comparative fault, so even if an insurer tries to assign you part of the blame, you can still recover, reduced by your share, and an attorney works to keep that share as low as the facts allow.
Claims from Roseville crashes are generally filed in the Placer County Superior Court, and a road defect involving a public entity triggers a much shorter claim deadline. The firm handles the investigation, the medical documentation, and the negotiation with the insurer so you can concentrate on healing rather than fighting over fault.
Building a Strong Rider Injury Case
A motorcyclist who survives a serious crash often faces a long road back, and the medical record is the backbone of the claim. Riders hurt around Roseville are frequently taken to Sutter Roseville Medical Center, and the treatment that follows, from orthopedic surgery to physical therapy for road rash and fractures, documents the true cost of the crash. Following through on every appointment matters, because insurers use any treatment gap to argue a rider healed faster than they did.
Compensation in a motorcycle case can include past and future medical bills, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, the cost of your bike and gear, and pain and suffering, with punitive damages possible where a driver was drunk or grossly reckless. Attorney Ghazaryan documents the full extent of your injuries, counters the unfair assumptions insurers make about riders, and pushes for a recovery that reflects what the crash actually took from you. There is no fee unless he recovers, and you deal directly with your attorney.
Our attorney
How Mihran M. Ghazaryan helps with motorcycle accidents
Riders walk in facing a built-in bias, and Mihran M. Ghazaryan's job is to dismantle it. He documents the mechanics of the crash — often with reconstruction — to show what actually happened, presents your injuries in full, and pushes back hard when an insurer tries to blame the rider. You deal directly with the attorney building that narrative, not a rotating intake team.
Types of motorcycle accidents we handle
Left-turn and right-of-way collisions
The classic cause: a car turning across the rider's path. Witness statements and timing analysis are key.
Lane-change and unsafe-merging crashes
California lane-splitting is legal — but reasonable. We document compliance with CHP guidelines to defeat shared-fault claims.
Road-defect and dooring claims
Government-entity claims have a six-month presentation deadline. Dooring claims involve California Vehicle Code §22517.
Damages
What compensation can cover
Every motorcycle 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 care immediately — adrenaline and gear can hide serious injury.
- Photograph the bike, your gear, and the scene before anything moves.
- Preserve your gear — helmet, jacket, gloves — without cleaning it.
- Identify any witnesses; bystanders often vanish quickly after motorcycle crashes.
- Call us before talking to 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.
