Semi-truck crash patterns we screen for
Common patterns include fatigued driving, unsafe lane changes, following too closely, speeding downhill, improper loading, brake problems, tire failures, distracted driving, and pressure from delivery schedules.
The driver is only one part of the case
A claim may also examine hiring, training, supervision, route planning, maintenance, load securement, and whether the carrier ignored warning signs in the driver's safety history.
What to gather before the review
Useful items include photos, crash report number, truck markings, carrier name, trailer number, witness names, insurance letters, hospital records, and any messages from adjusters.
How serious truck cases get built
A strong Semi-Truck Accident Lawyer in Utah claim is built like an investigation, not a routine insurance file. The first job is to identify the driver, motor carrier, trailer owner, trip purpose, cargo chain, maintenance history, and insurance layers. The next job is to preserve the records that explain what happened before they are overwritten, repaired, or treated as ordinary business data.
First evidence targets
- ECM and telematics data showing speed, braking, throttle, and hard stops.
- ELD and hours-of-service records, plus fuel, toll, GPS, and dispatch documents.
- Driver qualification file, training records, medical certification, and prior safety issues.
- Pre-trip inspections, DVIRs, maintenance records, repair orders, and annual inspections.
Scene and video targets
- Dash camera footage, nearby business cameras, traffic cameras, and doorbell video.
- Photos of vehicle positions, debris, skid marks, road grade, signage, and weather.
- Witness names, first responder agencies, crash report numbers, and tow yard locations.
- Trailer number, USDOT number, license plates, company markings, and cargo documents.
Why the carrier's first investigation is not enough
Large carriers and insurers often have rapid-response systems that start immediately after a serious crash. Their investigators may inspect the truck, speak with the driver, photograph the scene, and shape the claim before the injured person has medical stability. An independent review gives intake a way to spot what needs to be preserved and what may be missing from the police report.
Liability is usually bigger than the driver
Truck cases can involve the driver, motor carrier, freight broker, shipper, loader, trailer owner, repair shop, vehicle lessor, parts manufacturer, or a company that created unsafe timing pressure. The key question is not just who was driving, but who controlled the trip, the vehicle, the cargo, and the safety decisions that led to the crash.
Damages need a future-focused file
Truck crash injuries are often evaluated too narrowly at the beginning. The file should track emergency care, imaging, surgery, specialists, work restrictions, wage loss, future treatment, household help, psychological symptoms, and permanent limits. In catastrophic or fatal cases, the damages model may need life-care planning, vocational analysis, economic loss review, and estate documentation.