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Trucking Accident

 

Accidents involving large trucks are among the most serious and most deadly in

the United states. At The Neighborhood Law Group, we recognize that handling

these cases requires a through understanding of commercial vehicle regulations

on both the federal and state level. Trucking companies are required to follow

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations concerning their equipment and their

drivers' hours of service. In Georgia, the department of motor vehicle safety is

also charged with the task of adopting regulations regarding the safety of motor

carriers. driver fatigue is a common problem, as hours of service regulations are

routinely violated. Careful examination of records after an accident often shows

serious and even fraudulent violations of those safety regulations. However,

trucking companies are only required to maintain many of those records for six

months. Without obtaining those records before they are destroyed, the injured person or survivors of a person killed in a truck wreck has a much more difficult time proving the trucking company's negligence. 

 

The following represents facts and figures regarding large truck accidents and the serious damages they inflict on our roadways every year. One out of nine traffic fatalities in 2007 resulted from a collision involving a large truck. In 2007, 413,000 large trucks were involved in traffic crashes in the United States; 4,584 were involved in fatal crashes. A total of 4,808 people died (12% of all the traffic fatalities reported in 2007) and an additional 101,000 were injured in those crashes. In 2007, large trucks accounted for 8% of all vehicles involved in fatal crashes and 4% of all vehicles involved in injury and property-damage-only crashes. 75% of fatalities in large truck crashes were occupants of other vehicles involved in the crash. Only 17% of fatalities involved drivers or occupants of large trucks. 

 

Large trucks were much more likely to be involved in a fatal multiple-vehicle crash - as opposed to a fatal single-vehicle crash - than were passenger vehicles (82% of all large trucks involved in fatal crashes, compared with 59% of all passenger vehicles). Most of the fatal crashes involving large trucks occurred in rural areas (62%), during the daytime (66%), and on weekdays (78%). The percentage of large-truck drivers involved in fatal crashes who had a blood alcohol concentration of .08 grams per deciliter or higher was 1% in 2007. The BAC level for all commercial vehicle operators in every state in the U.S. is .04 g/dL, half of the legal limit of .08 for all other drivers. 

 

In all automobile accident cases it is essential that measures be taken promptly to preserve evidence, investigate the accident in question, and to enable physicians or other expert witnesses to thoroughly evaluate injuries. If you or a loved one is a victim of an automobile accident, call The Neighborhood Law Group now at 1-855-4-NLGLAW or click here to submit a simple case form. The initial consultation is free of charge and if we agree to accept your case, we will work on a contingent fee basis, which means we get paid for our services only if there is a monetary award or recovery of funds. Don't delay! You may have a valid claim and entitled to compensation for your injuries, but a lawsuit must be filed before the statute of limitations expires. 

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