Auto Accident · Bushwick

Car Accident and Personal Injury Lawyer in Bushwick, Brooklyn

Bushwick is one of Brooklyn’s most diverse neighborhoods — heavily Latinx (Dominican, Puerto Rican, Mexican), with growing Black and white populations — and its traffic patterns reflect a working neighborhood’s commercial and residential mix. Knickerbocker Avenue’s commercial activity, the L train running underneath Wyckoff, the Myrtle-Wyckoff intersection’s notorious complexity, Broadway’s truck route, and Flushing Avenue’s industrial traffic all combine to produce one of NYC’s higher per-capita accident rates.

Amparo Law Firm represents Bushwick residents and workers injured in motor vehicle accidents, pedestrian strikes, and cyclist collisions. Free consultation in English and Spanish.
  • Myrtle-Wyckoff intersection. One of the most-cited dangerous intersections in NYC — multi-direction traffic, the L train station entrance, heavy bus volume, and a chronic enforcement problem.
  • Knickerbocker Avenue between Myrtle and Flushing — commercial activity, double-parking, pedestrian density.
  • Wyckoff Avenue along the L train — corridor with limited turning room and frequent dooring.
  • Broadway — designated truck route with multiple bus routes and school zones.
  • Flushing Avenue — industrial traffic, limited pedestrian infrastructure.
  • Bushwick Avenue — alternative arterial with speeding incidents.

PIP coverage. 30-day filing deadline. Pain and suffering requires meeting the serious injury threshold.

Call 911. Photograph the scene. Get the police report. Get medical care. File the PIP application within 30 days. Don’t give a recorded statement. Call us — we work in Spanish.

Bilingual representation in English and Spanish. Federal-court-trained advocacy. Free consultation, no fee unless we recover. We represent clients regardless of immigration status.

Frequently asked questions.

New York is a "no-fault" state. What does that actually mean for my injury case?

New York’s No-Fault Law (Insurance Law §5103) means your own auto insurance pays your initial medical bills and lost wages up to $50,000, regardless of who caused the crash. To sue the at-fault driver for pain-and-suffering damages, your injury must meet the “serious injury” threshold in Insurance Law §5102(d) — one of nine categories: death, dismemberment, significant disfigurement, fracture, loss of a fetus, permanent loss of use of a body organ or system, permanent consequential limitation, significant limitation, or a medically determined injury that prevents normal daily activities for at least 90 of the 180 days following the crash.

The No-Fault statute requires you to file an application (NF-2) with your own insurer within 30 days of the accident (Ins. Law §5103). Missing it can mean losing access to no-fault medical benefits — but not your tort case. Contact a lawyer immediately; some exceptions and equitable arguments may preserve benefits.

Yes, through two pathways. Your own policy’s Uninsured Motorist (UM) coverage stands in the shoes of the missing insurance. If you don’t have UM (or were a pedestrian), MVAIC — the Motor Vehicle Accident Indemnification Corporation — covers serious injuries from uninsured drivers, hit-and-runs, and stolen-vehicle crashes. MVAIC requires a Notice of Intention within 90 days of the accident.

When a rideshare app trip is active (driver is en route or you’re in the car), the rideshare company’s commercial policy provides up to $1.25 million in liability and uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage in New York. This stacks on top of the driver’s personal policy. The trip status at the moment of the crash determines which layer applies — preserve trip-record evidence early.

Three years from the date of the accident for personal injury (CPLR §214(5)). If the at-fault vehicle is a municipal vehicle — MTA bus, NYCHA shuttle, sanitation truck, police car — you must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days under GML §50-e and then a Summons & Complaint within one year and 90 days. The municipal deadline is unforgiving; act quickly.

Photos of vehicle damage, the scene, and any visible injuries. The other driver’s license, registration, and insurance card. Witness names and phone numbers. The police report number and the responding officer’s name. If you went to the hospital, every discharge paperwork. If a rideshare or commercial vehicle was involved, screenshot your trip record or the company name on the vehicle. Don’t post about the crash on social media until you’ve talked to a lawyer.

Service Area
High-Incident Intersections
Myrtle Ave & Wyckoff
J/M/Z hub
Knickerbocker Ave & Linden
Commercial corridor
Broadway & Halsey
Pedestrian density
Flushing Ave & Bushwick
Truck corridor
Wyckoff & DeKalb
Bicycle / pedestrian mix

If you were injured in a Bushwick, Brooklyn accident, call us today.

Free case evaluation. No fee unless we recover for you.