Truck Accident

Ken Shigley “specializes in wrongful death cases against trucking companies.”

Atlanta Journal – Constitution, May 7, 2018

There are crucial differences between commercial trucking cases and other motor vehicle collision cases. Ignorance of those differences can be compound tragedy for the victim and her family. Read more about it here.

Interstate trucking is governed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations, and such cases involve technology, business practices, insurance coverages, and discovery of documents and electronic records unfamiliar to the vast majority of lawyers. If you or a loved one has a catastrophic interstate truck and bus wreck case it is essential that you promptly hire an experienced trucking trial lawyer.

In a catastrophic truck wreck case, someone must act quickly on behalf of the victim to get an experienced trucking lawyer on the case.

This is due to the speed with which trucking companies and their insurers spring into action after a catastrophic truck wreck. Typically, a trucking company or its insurer sends a “rapid response team” to an accident scene as soon as it learns of the wreck. Within an hour after a crash occurs, the company has a claims investigator at the scene seeking evidence favorable to the defense. Too often, evidence “disappears.”

The next step is to begin trying to lull the victim and her family into inaction by promising to “do the right thing,” and perhaps making an offer of settlement that may tempt an unsophisticated victim who is still in shock, but at a bargain price in light of what the company knows. The objective is to deal directly with the victim, telling her that she doesn’t need an attorney. Remember that the trucking company and insurance company at that point have a defense lawyer and several claims professionals working on their side, seeking to isolate the victim from professional assistance as long as possible.

Meanwhile, there is a tremendous amount of evidence that may be lost forever if the victim doesn’t have a knowledgeable, forceful attorney who can quickly act to preserve it. The larger trucking companies generally use on-board computers and satellite communication systems that generate an enormous amount of data that may be invaluable to the victim’s case. The companies that provide those services to truck fleets have record retention policies providing that data on truck operations is transmitted to the trucking companies, then purged from the provider’s computer system within 14 to 30 days. The data transmitted to the trucking companies is subject to “modification” and it is extraordinarily difficult and expensive to prove that data was altered.

In addition, trucking companies typically have record retention policies to purge such records in no more than the six months that the Federal Motor Carriers Safety Regulations require for preservation of driver logs, or other retention periods for other records.

There is also “black box” data generated by engine control modules (ECM’s) on all late model road tractor engines. Such data is extremely important in proving the performance of the truck and its drive. It must be downloaded according to manufacturers’ protocols, and if not promptly downloaded may be lost forever.

Without immediately retaining a lawyer who is prepared to immediately demand that the companies preserve a long list of paper records and electronic data after a wreck, the company may well destroy that information according to internal records management policies that are permissible under the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations. If necessary, one may need to file a suit just to require preservation of evidence prior to filing a personal injury or wrongful death case.

Allowing yourself to be lulled into inaction by representatives of a company that is busy gathering evidence favorable to the defense and avoiding preservation of unfavorable evidence, is a tragic outcome for trusting injury victims.

While a highly competent and ethical lawyer who practices in another specialty may have the resources to quickly identify a trucking lawyer, most lawyers really don’t know the ins and outs of trucking cases well enough to take timely and appropriate action. Most of our cases come by referral from lawyers in other specialties with whom we share responsibility and fees.

While trucking is vitally important for interstate commerce, it also creates substantial hazards. We like to think that all drivers who pilot forty ton rockets down the Interstate are the “knights of the road.” While all that is true for many, it is not true for all. And those who do negligently crash massive tractor- trailers are likely to cause serious damages.

Every year thousands of trucking fatalities occur — people are killed and hundreds of thousands more are injured as the result of truck accidents.

One out of every nine traffic fatalities involves a trucking accident. In one recent year, 457,000 large trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating greater than 10,000 pounds were involved in traffic crashes in the United States. That year, 4,669 trucks were involved in fatal traffic accidents resulting in 4,289 deaths. That’s the equivalent of ten Boeing 747 jumbo jets crashing each year, killing everyone aboard.

Of the fatalities that resulted from truck accidents involving large trucks, 78 percent were occupants in another vehicle, 8 percent were non-occupants, and only 15 percent were occupants of a large truck. Therefore, the majority who suffer as a result of fatal traffic accidents is innocent drivers and passengers just like you. However, truck driver fatalities are also a great concern.

The costs for fatal traffic accidents exceed $20 billion, including $8.7 billion in productivity losses, $2.5 billion in resource costs, and quality of life losses valued at $13.1 billion.

Among the most common causes of trucking catastrophes are:

  • Fatigued, sleepy or tired driver; driving too long and too many hours without rest. It is vitally important for an attorney to know what to do with that evidence once it is discovered.
  • Inadequate training of the truck driver
  • Overloaded trucks
  • Oversized trucks
  • Poorly maintained truck brakes
  • Driving in conditions of poor visibility or traction due to bad weather or visibility conditions, including fog, snow, rain, or smoke
  • Truck driver inexperience
  • Speeding over the limit or driving at high speeds beyond the road and weather conditions
  • Running off the road
  • Failure to yield the right of way
  • Aggressive driving behavior
  • Truck drivers driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol
  • Dangerous or reckless truck driver with a long record of wrecks and fatal traffic accidents
  • Unsafe safety systems, reflectors, lights, and other warning devices
  • Failure of truck to install an under-ride protection under-guard.

For more information on truck wrecks and the role of trucking litigation in protection of public safety, explore the features of this web site, including:

Client Reviews

Attorney Ken Shigley - did his lawyer thing - and increased my "take home amount" of settlement - the amount after paying core medical & legal fees - by over 3000% (three thousand percent) more than what some other law firms could do. He and courtney (his assistant) were like family! True blessings.

Louise W., Client

My mother was a passenger in a horrible car crash in Georgia when the car in which she was passenger was hit by an ex-convict who had no insurance, and who later died from a cocaine overdose. When I learned of mom's injury, I immediately flew in from California. As I work in Silicon Valley, I...

John P., Client

After my parents were killed in a tractor truck accident on December 2013, he fought hard against the insurance companies to help my brother, sister, and I. He was honest and always available to answer any questions I had. Ken went out of his way to meet with my brother and I while on vacation in...

Joan M., Client

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