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I-25 Denver Tech Center corridor in Greenwood Village, Colorado. CGH Injury Lawyers represents injured motorcyclists across Arapahoe County.
Greenwood Village, Arapahoe County

Greenwood Village Motorcycle Accident Lawyers Who Fight the Bias Against Injured Riders

Riders hurt on I-25 through the Denver Tech Center, on Arapahoe Road, or on C-470 face an insurer that will question every gear choice before the facts are in. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Greenwood Village from our Denver office and fights the rider-blame defense head on. No fee unless we win.

No fee unless we win

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Serving Greenwood Village from Our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • Colorado gives you three years from the date of the crash to file a motorcycle accident lawsuit (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)). If a government vehicle or public entity was involved, a separate written notice of claim is required within 182 days of discovering your injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)), far before the general filing deadline.
  • Colorado does not require helmets for riders 18 and older (C.R.S. 42-4-1502), but every rider and passenger must wear eye protection regardless of age (C.R.S. 42-4-232). Both choices can be weaponized by an insurer in a Greenwood Village claim to reduce what you recover under comparative negligence law.
  • Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule bars recovery if you are found 50 percent or more at fault (C.R.S. 13-21-111). Insurers routinely inflate a rider's fault percentage on I-25 DTC corridor crashes by pointing to gear choices, speed, and lane position. We challenge those assessments with documented evidence, not just argument.

Greenwood Village sits at the center of the Denver Tech Center, where I-25 carries approximately 246,000 vehicles per day through a 12-lane corridor that is one of the most crash-intensive stretches of highway in Colorado. For a motorcyclist, that corridor is especially dangerous: inattentive lane changes, merging semi-trucks, and sudden braking by DTC commuters put riders at serious risk with far less protection than a car offers. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Greenwood Village from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201. We represent injured riders and the families of those killed, and we know how to defeat the bias that insurers aim at motorcyclists in Arapahoe County. No upfront fees, and you pay nothing unless we win your case.

Crash types

The motorcycle crash scenarios we see most often in Greenwood Village

Greenwood Village produces a specific set of motorcycle crash profiles. The DTC corridor and Arapahoe Road each generate their own hazards for riders, and they are different from ordinary car accidents in how they are investigated, how fault is assigned, and how much the injuries typically cost.

High-risk crash patterns in this corridor

  • Inattentive lane changes on I-25 into a rider's path during DTC peak-hour commutes
  • Left-turn crashes on Arapahoe Road (CO 88) at signalized intersections near the I-25 interchange
  • Rear-end collisions on C-470 where DTC traffic backs up at the I-25 merge
  • Black ice crashes on I-25 overpasses and Arapahoe Road bridges over Cherry Creek in winter
  • Event-night crashes near Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre on Arapahoe Road during the May to September concert season
  • Dooring incidents and sudden stops by drivers exiting DTC parking structures onto connector roads

Who calls us after a Greenwood Village motorcycle crash

  • Riders hurt when a DTC commuter failed to check mirrors before a lane change on I-25
  • Motorcyclists struck by left-turning drivers who did not see them approaching on Arapahoe Road
  • Riders whose helmets or gear choices are already being used by an insurer to reduce their claim
  • Riders hit by an uninsured or underinsured driver who are now relying on their own UM/UIM coverage
  • Families who have lost a rider in a fatal Arapahoe County crash and need a wrongful death claim handled with care
The law that governs your case

Colorado motorcycle law decoded for Greenwood Village riders

Colorado motorcycle law lives mostly in C.R.S. Title 42. Riders who understand these rules before they need them are in a far stronger position when an insurer starts asking questions after a crash on I-25 or Arapahoe Road.

  1. Helmet law: C.R.S. 42-4-1502

    Colorado requires helmets only for riders and passengers under 18 years of age. Adult riders 18 and older may legally ride without a helmet, placing Colorado among the minority of states with a partial helmet law. Choosing not to wear a helmet is legal for an adult, but it is not consequence-free. Defense attorneys use the choice to argue you failed to mitigate your damages, which reduces your compensation under comparative negligence law even when the other driver was 100 percent responsible for the collision itself.

  2. Eye protection: C.R.S. 42-4-232

    All operators and passengers, regardless of age, must wear eye protection. Glasses, goggles, or a face shield each satisfy the requirement. A compliant windscreen of adequate height and transparency is an alternative. Failing to wear eye protection is a Class A traffic infraction, and that citation can be used in a liability dispute to chip away at your recovery, even on an Arapahoe County crash where the other driver ran a red light.

  3. Lane filtering: C.R.S. 42-4-1503 (legal since August 7, 2024)

    SB24-079 made lane filtering legal in Colorado starting August 7, 2024, but only under specific conditions: traffic must be completely stopped, the motorcycle must travel at 15 mph or less, and the road must have at least two adjacent same-direction lanes. Lane splitting, riding between lanes of moving traffic at speed, remains illegal. Insurers routinely mischaracterize legal filtering as illegal splitting to deny claims outright. If you were filtering legally when the crash occurred, the difference matters enormously to your claim, and we move fast to lock down the evidence that proves it.

  4. Statute of limitations: C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)

    Colorado gives you three years from the date of the motorcycle crash to file a lawsuit for injuries arising out of the use or operation of a motor vehicle. That deadline is hard. Miss it and you generally lose the right to sue, no matter how clearly the other driver was at fault. A separate, shorter clock applies when a government vehicle or public entity is involved: written notice of claim must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). In a corridor like the DTC where Colorado Department of Transportation vehicles are regularly present, that shorter clock may apply to your case without being obvious. Confirm your deadlines with an attorney early.

Class M endorsement: the license trap insurers love

Operating a motorcycle in Colorado requires a valid Class M endorsement, earned through a written test and an on-cycle skills test. A motorcycle-only license is available for riders who do not also drive a standard passenger vehicle. Riding without a valid Class M endorsement can result in criminal charges and gives the at-fault driver's insurer a grounds to dispute your claim entirely by arguing you were operating the vehicle illegally. If you did not have your endorsement current at the time of the crash, call us before you talk to any insurer.

Local knowledge

Greenwood Village courts. Greenwood Village trauma care. The roads where riders get hurt.

A motorcycle accident case in Greenwood Village belongs to a specific courthouse, specific trauma centers whose records become the backbone of your damages claim, and specific roads with documented hazard patterns for riders. We know this territory.

Where your lawsuit is filed

Arapahoe County District Court (18th Judicial District)

Motorcycle accident cases arising in Greenwood Village, an Arapahoe County municipality, are filed in the Arapahoe County District Court, part of Colorado's 18th Judicial District. The courthouse is located at 7325 S. Potomac Street, Centennial, CO 80112. The local jury pool, the defense firms that regularly appear there, and the local procedural rules all shape how a motorcycle claim plays out. Rider bias is real in any jury, and knowing how Arapahoe County juries have responded to these cases is part of how we build your claim. We practice in the 18th Judicial District.

Nearest Level I Trauma Center

HCA HealthONE Swedish Medical Center

Seriously injured riders from Greenwood Village crashes are typically transported to HCA HealthONE Swedish Medical Center, a Level I adult and pediatric trauma center with a Level I burn center, located at 501 East Hampden Avenue, Englewood, CO 80113. Road rash, fractures, spinal injuries, and traumatic brain injuries from motorcycle crashes require trauma-level care that Swedish is equipped to provide. Those emergency and surgical records document your injuries in detail and become the foundation of your economic damages claim. UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital (12505 E. 16th Avenue, Aurora, CO 80045), a second Level I trauma center verified by the American College of Surgeons, also serves the metro for the most critical cases.

Primary Rider Hazard Corridor

I-25 through the Denver Tech Center

The I-25 segment through Greenwood Village carries approximately 246,000 vehicles per day through the Denver Tech Center corridor. That volume combined with 12 lanes, aggressive lane-change patterns during morning and evening peak hours, and the mix of commercial trucks serving DTC businesses creates conditions that are particularly dangerous for motorcyclists. Multiple law enforcement agencies have coordinated enforcement operations on I-25 between mileposts 164 and 179 specifically because of documented crash patterns including fatalities. Riders who go down in this corridor face insurers with teams who know the corridor too. We know it better.

Roads and Seasonal Hazards

Arapahoe Road, C-470, and winter black ice

Arapahoe Road (Colorado State Highway 88) runs east-west through the heart of Greenwood Village, intersecting I-25 at Exit 197. For motorcyclists, the left-turn exposure at this interchange's signalized intersections is significant: drivers making left turns across the path of oncoming riders who are harder to see than cars account for a substantial share of serious motorcycle crashes nationally. C-470 (SH 470) forms the southern boundary of the metro and intersects I-25 near the Greenwood Village and Lone Tree border, adding another freeway-speed hazard for riders. The City of Greenwood Village maintains 224 lane miles of roads and runs 24-hour winter plowing, but black ice on bridges and overpasses, including the I-25 structures and the Arapahoe Road bridges over Cherry Creek, is a documented seasonal hazard that is especially lethal for two-wheeled vehicles. Fiddler's Green Amphitheatre events on Arapahoe Road from May through September create traffic surges that put riders at sharply elevated risk during those windows.

The rider-blame defense

How the other side fights your Greenwood Village motorcycle claim, and how we answer

Insurance defense teams run a predictable playbook against motorcycle claims in Arapahoe County. Every gear choice you made, every legal maneuver you performed, and every prior medical record you have becomes ammunition. Knowing these arguments before you meet them is the first step to defeating them.

The helmet and gear arguments

  • An adult rider who chose not to wear a helmet broke no Colorado law (C.R.S. 42-4-1502), but the insurer will still argue that choice worsened your head injuries and reduce your recovery accordingly.
  • A rider who wore a helmet but lacked eye protection (C.R.S. 42-4-232) may face a citation that the defense uses as evidence of negligence or a failure to take reasonable precautions.
  • The clothing you wore, jacket, gloves, boots, affects how the defense frames your "assumption of risk" of road rash or fractures. A legal choice is not an invitation to be injured; we make that argument clearly.
  • Even a rider who did everything correctly can have their fault percentage inflated by an insurer who portrays motorcycling itself as inherently reckless. We counter that framing with crash reconstruction evidence and expert witnesses when needed.

The speed and lane-position arguments

  • On the I-25 DTC corridor, defense attorneys argue a rider was traveling faster than surrounding traffic even when speed was within the limit, portraying lawful speed as a contributing cause of the crash.
  • A rider who was legally filtering under C.R.S. 42-4-1503 when the crash occurred will frequently face an insurer who mischaracterizes the maneuver as illegal lane splitting to deny the claim. The conditions, stopped traffic versus slow-moving traffic, and the speed, 15 mph or below, determine which law applies. We document both.
  • Lane position arguments target riders who were occupying any position other than center lane, suggesting they were riding "in blind spots" even when their lane position was legal and reasonable.
  • Under Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111), a rider found 49 percent at fault still recovers 51 percent of their damages. A rider found 50 percent or more at fault recovers nothing. The difference between 49 and 50 is exactly what adjusters target, and we challenge it.
After the crash

What to do after a motorcycle accident in Greenwood Village

The hours after a crash on I-25, Arapahoe Road, or any Greenwood Village road shape whether you can build a full claim. These steps protect your health and preserve the evidence an insurer will later try to minimize or dispute.

  1. Get to safety and call 911

    A police report creates an official record of the scene, identifies the at-fault driver, and documents road conditions. On I-25 through the DTC corridor, Colorado State Patrol is typically the responding agency. Ask for the report number and the responding officer's name before you leave the scene.

  2. Get trauma-level care immediately

    For serious injuries, HCA HealthONE Swedish Medical Center (501 E. Hampden Avenue, Englewood) is the nearest Level I trauma center. Traumatic brain injury, internal bleeding, spinal injury, and serious road rash can look minor immediately after the adrenaline of a crash. Get a full examination and keep every treatment record. A gap between the crash and your first medical visit is one of the most-used defenses in motorcycle claims, suggesting your injuries were not caused by the crash.

  3. Document the scene in detail

    Photograph your bike, the other vehicle, skid marks, road surface conditions, and your gear as it was when the crash occurred. On I-25, note the milepost and the lane you were in. On Arapahoe Road, photograph the intersection signal. If dashcam footage from nearby vehicles or traffic cameras may exist, note that too so we can move quickly to preserve it.

  4. Do not give a recorded statement

    The at-fault driver's insurer is not on your side, and this is especially true for motorcycle claims where the adjuster's starting assumption is often that the rider was at fault. Do not agree to a recorded statement, sign any release, or accept any settlement offer without attorney review. Early offers are designed to close a claim before you know the full cost of your injuries.

  5. Contact CGH Injury Lawyers

    Colorado's three-year filing deadline (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)) starts running on the day of the crash. If a government entity is involved, the 182-day CGIA notice clock (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)) starts running from the date you discovered the injury, not necessarily the crash date. We begin evidence preservation immediately. A free consultation costs nothing, and you pay no fee unless we win your case.

Compensation

What compensation can you recover after a Greenwood Village motorcycle accident?

Colorado law allows injured motorcyclists to pursue two broad categories of damages: economic losses documented with bills and records, and non-economic losses for the human cost of the injury. Economic damages and compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement are never capped. For seriously injured riders, those uncapped categories typically drive the largest part of the recovery.

Economic damages (no cap)

  • Emergency transport and trauma care, including treatment at Swedish Medical Center or UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital
  • Surgical and specialist fees for orthopedic, neurological, and spinal injuries common to motorcycle crashes
  • Physical therapy, occupational therapy, and long-term rehabilitation
  • Lost wages during the recovery period
  • Lost earning capacity if the injuries affect your ability to work long term
  • Motorcycle repair or replacement and riding gear destroyed in the crash
  • All other out-of-pocket expenses caused by the crash

Non-economic damages (capped at $1.5M for 2025 and later claims)

  • Pain and suffering from injuries that motorcycle crashes produce at a far higher rate than car crashes, including road rash, fractures, and traumatic brain injury
  • Emotional distress and anxiety, including post-traumatic stress from a high-speed I-25 collision
  • Loss of enjoyment of life, including inability to ride again after a catastrophic crash
  • Loss of consortium for a spouse or family member

For claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, Colorado caps non-economic damages such as pain and suffering at $1.5 million under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Lower caps apply to older claims based on when the claim accrued: claims from 2024 were capped at $729,790 (or up to $1,459,600 with clear and convincing evidence), and claims from 2022 to 2023 were capped at $642,180. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is not subject to any cap at all under Colorado law, which is why the most serious motorcycle crash cases, those involving spinal cord injury, amputation, or permanent neurological damage, often build their largest recovery from that uncapped category. Punitive damages are available when the at-fault driver acted with fraud, malice, or willful and wanton disregard for others, capped at the amount of actual damages with a court option to increase up to three times actual damages for continued willful conduct (C.R.S. 13-21-102). When a driver was intoxicated and caused a fatal motorcycle crash, that willful and wanton standard is often in play.

Insurance and fault

How insurance and comparative negligence work in a Greenwood Village motorcycle case

A serious motorcycle crash can easily exceed 100,000 dollars in medical costs, lost wages, and rehabilitation, and Colorado's minimum liability limits often fall far short of covering it. Understanding how coverage works and how fault is allocated is essential before you talk to any insurer.

  • Colorado is a fault state. You pursue recovery from the at-fault driver's liability insurer, not your own. Colorado's minimum bodily injury liability limits are $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident, which can be exhausted quickly in a serious motorcycle crash.
  • When the at-fault driver is uninsured or carries inadequate limits, your own uninsured or underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage becomes the primary source. Colorado UM/UIM claims are governed by C.R.S. 13-80-107.5 under Pham v. State Farm, 2013 CO 17. We confirm what coverage is in play before we send a single demand.
  • Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111). If you are found less than 50 percent at fault for the crash and your injuries, you can recover damages reduced by your percentage of fault. A rider found 49 percent at fault recovers 51 percent of their damages. A rider found 50 percent or more at fault recovers nothing. This is the single most important legal rule in any motorcycle case, because adjusters target it relentlessly.
  • The DTC corridor draws high volumes of corporate commuters and commercial vehicles. At-fault drivers may carry employer fleet policies or commercial coverage that adds another available layer beyond their personal limits. We identify all available coverage before negotiating.
  • Do not accept the insurer's first offer without attorney review. First offers in motorcycle cases are almost always below the full value of the claim, and accepting one typically waives your right to pursue additional compensation.
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Why CGH

Why Greenwood Village riders choose CGH Injury Lawyers

Greenwood Village is a corporate hub. The at-fault driver's insurer may have a regional claims office right in the DTC. That insurer will have an adjuster assigned before you have a diagnosis, and that adjuster's default assumption is that the rider was reckless. Having trial-ready counsel on your side from the first call changes how that adjuster calculates what your case is worth.

Trial-Ready

Built to try your case in Arapahoe County.

Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. When attorneys are genuinely ready to try a motorcycle case in Arapahoe County District Court, insurers respond differently to a demand. That credibility moves settlements.

Denver Office, Arapahoe County Cases

We serve Greenwood Village from Denver.

CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Greenwood Village office. We serve Greenwood Village from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201. We file in Arapahoe County District Court and know the 18th Judicial District. Distance is not an obstacle to full representation of injured riders.

ABOTA

Trial lawyers, not a settlement mill.

Kevin Cheney has tried over 25 cases to verdict as an ABOTA member. That trial record is why insurers take our demands seriously even when a motorcycle rider's claim involves disputed gear choices and fault percentages.

Best Lawyers in America

Recognized every year since 2023.

Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized by Best Lawyers every year since 2023. CGH is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly Cheney Galluzzi and Howard. Every Greenwood Village motorcycle case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney.

Bilingual

Hablamos espanol.

Spanish-speaking staff and attorneys serve Arapahoe County's Spanish-speaking community. If your first language is Spanish, call us and we will work with you in the language that is most comfortable for you from the first consultation through resolution.

No Win, No Fee

Contingency only.

You pay nothing out of pocket for legal fees. We advance costs and collect only from a settlement or verdict in your Greenwood Village motorcycle case. If we do not win, you owe nothing.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict Statewide Colorado coverage Bilingual EN / ES Free consultation No fee unless we win
Questions

Greenwood Village motorcycle accident, frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a motorcycle accident lawsuit in Greenwood Village?

Colorado gives you three years from the date of the crash to file a lawsuit for injuries arising out of the use or operation of a motor vehicle, including a motorcycle (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)). That deadline is hard. Miss it and you generally lose your right to sue regardless of how clear the other driver's fault was. A separate, much shorter clock applies when a government vehicle or public entity is involved: written notice of claim must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)), which can run far sooner than most riders realize. Get your specific deadlines confirmed early.

I was not wearing a helmet when I crashed on I-25. Can I still recover compensation?

Yes. Colorado does not require adult riders 18 and older to wear a helmet (C.R.S. 42-4-1502), and not wearing one does not bar you from filing a claim. However, if the at-fault driver's insurer argues your head injuries were worsened by the lack of a helmet, that argument can reduce your non-economic compensation under Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111). We fight that reduction by documenting that the other driver caused the crash and that the injury severity was not your responsibility.

Where is a Greenwood Village motorcycle accident lawsuit filed?

Greenwood Village is in Arapahoe County. Motorcycle accident lawsuits arising here are filed in the Arapahoe County District Court, part of Colorado's 18th Judicial District, located at 7325 S. Potomac Street, Centennial, CO 80112. Most cases settle before a lawsuit is filed, but where a case would be tried affects the local rules, the jury pool, and the defense firms involved. We practice in the 18th Judicial District and know what an Arapahoe County jury expects to see in a motorcycle case.

Is there a cap on what I can recover after a motorcycle accident in Greenwood Village?

For claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, Colorado caps non-economic damages such as pain and suffering at $1.5 million (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5). Lower caps apply to claims from earlier years: $729,790 for 2024 claims and $642,180 for 2022 to 2023 claims. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is never capped, and economic damages such as medical bills, lost wages, and future care costs are also never capped. For most seriously injured riders, the uncapped categories drive the largest part of the recovery.

The driver who hit me had no insurance. What are my options?

If you carry uninsured or underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage, you can file a claim with your own insurer. Colorado UM/UIM claims are governed by C.R.S. 13-80-107.5 under Pham v. State Farm, 2013 CO 17. We also evaluate whether any other coverage applies, such as a commercial or fleet policy if the at-fault driver was on the job at the time of the crash. We confirm what coverage exists before we file or negotiate anything.

Was lane filtering legal when my crash happened on Arapahoe Road?

Lane filtering became legal in Colorado on August 7, 2024 under SB24-079, codified at C.R.S. 42-4-1503. It is legal only when traffic is completely stopped, the motorcycle is traveling at 15 mph or less, and the road has at least two adjacent same-direction lanes. Lane splitting, riding between lanes of moving traffic at speed, remains illegal. If your crash occurred before August 7, 2024, any filtering was illegal regardless of conditions. If it occurred after, the specific conditions at the time determine whether you were legally filtering or illegally splitting, which can be the deciding factor in whether your claim is approved or denied.

It's More Than Money.

You were hurt riding in Greenwood Village. We answer the bias against you.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Serving Greenwood Village from our Denver office.

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Prefer to read first? See how Colorado motorcycle accident law works statewide.

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205 · Serving Greenwood Village and Arapahoe County