Semi Truck Accidents
Truck Accident: Five Tips to Jump Start your Injury Claim
By Rex Bush, Attorney at Law
The Crash
It’s a typical January morning as Sally leaves her home in Murray
and enters I 15 headed for work at a law firm in downtown Salt Lake
City. It is 7:30 a.m.
At the same time a large semi loaded with steel windows is
approaching from the South. The driver, a long haul veteran of 20 years
over the road service for a major national trucking company has been up
since 3:30 a.m.
Suddenly the driver slumps forward, lack of sleep from week long
road trip have caught up with him. His truck drifts slowly to the
right, into the adjacent lane.
“BANG!” The trucker’s right side mirror has just clipped the mirror of a flat bed truck in the adjacent lane.
The noise and accompanying jolt are enough to wake the trucker but
his hasty response now imperils other drivers. He overcorrects into the
left lane where Sally is motoring peacefully to work.
The sudden impact abruptly changes Sally’s direction and she veers
sharply across the media into southbound I 15 traffic. The head on
collision ends Sally’s life and that of the southbound driver.
The Logbook
In the truck accident legal case that followed, the lawyer for Sally’s family requested the driver’s logbook.
The logbook showed that the driver had been on the road for only
two hours. Suspicious, the family’s truck accident lawyer, requested bills of lading,
fuel receipts, and electronic data from the Global Positioning System
used by the driver’s company to track his whereabouts.
The GPS data showed what the lawyer had suspected–the logbooks were falsified.
“The trucking industry appears to spend more time doctoring
reports, falsifying logs and covering up fault than they do screening
and training drivers,” says Frank B. a prominent Texas personal injury
lawyer.
Federal law requires interstate drivers to record, either in
written or digital “logbook” how they spend their workday. An
interstate trucker is limited to 11 hours over a fourteen hour period.
And once that eleven hours are up he must take a rest break lasting for
at least ten straight hours.
Driver Fatigue
Truck driver fatigue is a major safety problem in truck accident
legal cases. Some studies, including two by the National Transportation
Safety Board, indicate that truck driver fatigue is a factor in 30 to
40 of severe crashes.
With driver fatigue and logbook falsification both being serious
problems, the development and of electronic technology for the trucking
industry has become a subject of considerable controversy.
What To Do In Case Of A Truck Crash
Here are some tips to follow if you are involved in a truck accident legal matter:
1. Never sign anything under pressure;
2. Take photographs and/or video of the crash site and the vehicles involved in the truck accident legal matter;
3. Do not sell or otherwise dispose of the vehicle involved in the crash;
4. Collect and preserve evidence after the crash;
5. Contact investigating authorities immediately.
| Author Resource:-
Rex Bush is founder of Bush Law Firm near Salt Lake City, Utah where he
handles personal injury cases in Utah and throughout the United States
and Canada. For information on personal injury issues visit his Utah
injury attorney website: http://www.utah-personal-injury-attorney.com |
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