It's pretty common to see cars that were rear-ended while parked on the busier streets around here. Those streets are mostly flat and straight, so I figure the wrecks are caused by drivers looking at cell phones.
I was out for a run one Saturday morning, in a quiet residential neighborhood with streets wide enough for two lanes of traffic and curbside parking on both sides. Near the top of a small hill were two wrecked BMWs. The one that got hit first had the right front pushed up onto the curb. The offending vehicle must have been running on a flat tire or dragging something major, because I followed a perfect score line in the pavement up the hill and through the next block, where it then turned right toward a stoplight on a bigger street. There was minor damage to a Taurus on that next block, so the driver must have been so wasted they couldn't even stay in the center of a street with the equivalent of two travel lanes.
I was out for a run one Saturday morning, in a quiet residential neighborhood with streets wide enough for two lanes of traffic and curbside parking on both sides. Near the top of a small hill were two wrecked BMWs. The one that got hit first had the right front pushed up onto the curb. The offending vehicle must have been running on a flat tire or dragging something major, because I followed a perfect score line in the pavement up the hill and through the next block, where it then turned right toward a stoplight on a bigger street. There was minor damage to a Taurus on that next block, so the driver must have been so wasted they couldn't even stay in the center of a street with the equivalent of two travel lanes.