⚖️ FREE CASE EVALUATION — NO FEE UNLESS WE WIN — CALL 877-283-2745 NOW
Georgia · South Carolina · North Florida

When a Truck Wreck
Changes Everything

ConnerKutchey LLLP — Right Choice Law™

Catastrophic truck accidents leave victims with devastating injuries, crushing medical debt, and lost futures. ConnerKutchey LLLP fights to hold negligent carriers accountable and recover every dollar victims deserve.

📞 877-283-2745
Call Now — 24/7
877-283-2745
Free consultation · No fee unless we win
Georgia Super LawyerSince 2006
🏆
Best LawyersSince 2007
💰
Million Dollar AdvocatesForum Member
🏛️
National Trial LawyersTop 100
📍
Serving Georgia, South Carolina & North Florida
Offices in Savannah & Jesup, Georgia
30+
Years of Experience
$M+
Recovered for Clients
100%
Free Case Review
0
Fee Unless You Win

The Right Choice for Truck Wreck Victims

When you're fighting a trucking company with powerful insurance lawyers, you need a firm that matches their resources — and exceeds their resolve.

⚖️
Trial-Proven Litigator
Mike Conner has spent 30+ years trying cases in federal and state courts. Trucking companies and insurers know when they're facing a lawyer who actually goes to trial — and it changes how they negotiate.
🔍
Truck Crash Investigation
We move immediately after a crash to preserve critical evidence — black box data, driver logs, maintenance records, and surveillance footage — before it disappears.
🏥
Maximum Compensation
We fight for every dollar: medical bills (past and future), lost wages, permanent disability, pain and suffering, and wrongful death damages for families who've lost everything.
📋
Federal Trucking Law Expertise
Commercial truck accident cases involve complex FMCSA regulations, multiple liable parties, and large commercial insurance policies. We know this terrain intimately.
🤝
No Fee Unless We Win
You pay nothing unless and until we recover for you. Your financial situation will never be a barrier to getting the representation you deserve after a catastrophic truck crash.
📞
Direct Attorney Access
At ConnerKutchey, you're represented by Mike Conner — a decorated trial attorney — not handed off to a paralegal. You'll know your lawyer, and your lawyer will know your case.

Don't Wait. Evidence Disappears.

Trucking companies deploy investigators and legal teams within hours of a crash. You need experienced counsel on your side immediately.

877-283-2745

David Michael "Mike" Conner

Founder & Managing Partner, ConnerKutchey LLLP · Savannah & Jesup, Georgia

👨‍⚖️
Mike Conner
Founding Partner
  • Georgia Super Lawyer (Since 2006)
  • 🏆 Best Lawyers in America (Since 2007)
  • 🏛️ National Trial Lawyers Top 100
  • ⚖️ Litigation Counsel of America Fellow
  • 💰 Million Dollar Advocates Forum
  • 💎 Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum
  • 📰 US News Best Lawyers & Best Law Firms
  • 🎓 Georgia Trend Legal Elite

Mike Conner is one of South Georgia's most accomplished and respected trial attorneys — a decorated litigator with more than 30 years of experience prosecuting and defending catastrophic personal injury and wrongful death cases, as well as complex commercial, business, construction, and corporate matters.

As founder and managing partner of ConnerKutchey LLLP, Mike has built a firm defined by his own values: meticulous preparation, unflinching advocacy, and an unwavering commitment to the people and businesses he represents. In the area of serious truck accident and personal injury law, Mike has earned membership in both the Million Dollar Advocates Forum and the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum — recognitions limited to attorneys who have achieved these verdicts and settlements on behalf of their clients.

Mike has conducted trials in federal and state courts across Georgia and before multiple federal circuit and district courts, the United States Tax Court, and administrative bodies. He has taken depositions, argued motions, selected juries, and negotiated settlements in virtually every area of civil practice — making him a uniquely capable advocate for victims of catastrophic truck wrecks and serious car accidents.

He also serves as City Attorney for his hometown of Jesup, Georgia, and has served in numerous leadership roles in professional and civic organizations throughout his career. He has been married to his wife Toni for 30 years and has two college-aged sons.

Education
Juris Doctor — cum laude with General Honors
University of Georgia, Lumpkin School of Law
1995–1998
BBA, Accounting — magna cum laude with Highest Honors
University of Georgia, Terry College of Business · Beta Gamma Sigma
1988–1992
Bar Admissions & Courts
State Bar of Georgia (1995)
Supreme Court of Georgia
Georgia Court of Appeals
US Court of Appeals, 11th Circuit
US District Court — N. District of Georgia
US District Court — M. District of Georgia
US District Court — S. District of Georgia
United States Tax Court
Honors & Recognitions
⭐ Georgia Super Lawyer
Since 2006
🏆 Best Lawyers
Since 2007
🏛️ National Trial Lawyers Top 100
⚖️ Litigation Counsel of America Fellow
💰 Million Dollar Advocates Forum
💎 Multi-Million Dollar Advocates
📰 US News Best Lawyers
📰 US News Best Law Firms
🎓 Georgia Trend Legal Elite

Practice Areas

ConnerKutchey LLLP focuses on the most serious motor vehicle crash cases — the ones that permanently change lives — serving victims in Georgia, South Carolina, and North Florida.

01
🚛
Commercial Truck Accidents
18-wheelers, semi-trucks, and large commercial vehicles present unique dangers and unique legal challenges. We hold carriers, drivers, and trucking companies accountable.
  • 18-Wheeler & Semi-Truck Crashes
  • Fatigued or Hours-of-Service Violations
  • Improperly Loaded Cargo
  • Brake & Equipment Failure
  • Driver Negligence & Impairment
  • FMCSA Regulation Violations
  • Multiple Liable Parties
02
🚗
Serious Car Accidents
When a car accident results in permanent injury, disability, or disfigurement, the stakes demand a seasoned trial attorney — not a settlement mill.
  • Catastrophic & Permanent Injuries
  • Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI)
  • Spinal Cord & Paralysis Cases
  • Drunk & Impaired Driver Accidents
  • Reckless Driving Collisions
  • Intersection & Rear-End Crashes
  • Underinsured Motorist Claims
03
💔
Wrongful Death
No verdict can replace a life lost. But holding those responsible accountable — and securing financial justice for surviving families — is our solemn commitment.
  • Truck & Motor Vehicle Fatalities
  • Survival Actions
  • Loss of Consortium Claims
  • Funeral & Estate Expenses
  • Future Earnings & Support
  • Punitive Damages Where Warranted
  • Insurance Company Negotiations
04
🏥
Catastrophic Injury
Spinal cord injuries, amputations, severe burns, and traumatic brain injuries demand life-long care and maximum compensation. We pursue every dollar.
  • Spinal Cord Injuries & Paralysis
  • Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
  • Amputation & Limb Loss
  • Severe Burns
  • Permanent Disfigurement
  • Life Care Plan Damages
05
🚐
Other Commercial Vehicles
Accidents involving delivery trucks, buses, tanker trucks, and other commercial vehicles carry distinct legal considerations under state and federal law.
  • Delivery & Box Truck Accidents
  • Bus & Passenger Van Crashes
  • Tanker & Hazmat Truck Accidents
  • Dump Truck & Construction Vehicles
  • Rideshare & Gig Economy Vehicles
06
💼
Insurance Bad Faith
When an insurance company refuses to fairly compensate an injured victim, Georgia law may provide additional remedies — including punitive damages — against bad-faith carriers.
  • Unreasonable Claim Denial
  • Delayed Payment of Valid Claims
  • Low-Ball Settlement Tactics
  • Failure to Defend Insured
  • O.C.G.A. § 33-4-6 Bad Faith Claims

Not Sure If You Have a Case? Let Us Decide.

Free, confidential consultations. No obligation. No fee unless we win.

877-283-2745

Results That Matter

ConnerKutchey LLLP has secured significant verdicts and settlements for victims of catastrophic truck wrecks, serious car accidents, and wrongful death. Every case is different — past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

$Multi-Million
18-Wheeler — Catastrophic Spinal Injury
Settlement against commercial carrier for client who suffered permanent spinal cord injury in rear-end collision with an 18-wheeler on I-95. Client required lifetime care and assistance.
Seven Figure
Traumatic Brain Injury — Auto Accident
Recovery for victim who sustained severe traumatic brain injury in a head-on collision caused by a distracted driver, resulting in permanent cognitive and physical impairment.
Seven Figure
Commercial Vehicle — Wrongful Death
Wrongful death action against employer and driver of commercial delivery vehicle. Surviving spouse and minor children compensated for loss of income, companionship, and parental guidance.
Substantial
Truck Crash — Amputation Injury
Recovery for client who suffered traumatic below-knee amputation following collision with an overloaded commercial truck. Damages included prosthetics, rehabilitation, and lost earning capacity.
Substantial
Multi-Vehicle Pile-Up — Multiple Injuries
Settlement in multi-vehicle commercial truck accident case involving multiple injured plaintiffs. Claims against carrier, driver, and cargo company resolved favorably through aggressive pre-trial litigation.
Important Notice: Prior results described on this website do not guarantee or predict a similar result in any future case. Every case is unique and depends on its specific facts and circumstances. The results above are representative of some matters handled by ConnerKutchey LLLP but are not intended as a complete list of all case results. Some amounts have been presented in general terms consistent with Georgia Bar advertising rules. No representation is made that the quality of legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers.

Your Case Deserves Maximum Recovery

Tell us what happened. We'll tell you what it's worth — honestly and at no charge.

877-283-2745

Frequently Asked Questions

Questions we hear from truck accident victims and their families — answered plainly and honestly.

Call 911 immediately and get medical attention — even if you feel fine. Injuries like traumatic brain injuries and internal bleeding may not be obvious at first. If possible, photograph the scene, vehicles, skid marks, and road conditions. Get the names and contact information of witnesses. Do not speak with the trucking company's representatives or their insurance adjusters without first consulting an attorney. Then call us: 877-283-2745. Trucking companies deploy their own investigators within hours. You need counsel on your side just as fast.
In Georgia, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of the accident (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33). For wrongful death claims, the two-year period generally runs from the date of death. However, there are important exceptions, and certain evidence — such as electronic logging device (ELD) data, black box recordings, and trucking company records — can be destroyed or overwritten very quickly. Contacting an attorney as soon as possible after a truck crash is critical to protecting your rights.
Truck accident cases often involve multiple liable parties, which is one reason they are more complex than ordinary car accident cases. Potentially liable parties include: the truck driver (for negligent driving, fatigue, impairment); the trucking company (for hiring, training, and supervision failures; maintenance violations; FMCSA violations); the cargo loading company (if improperly loaded cargo caused the crash); the truck or parts manufacturer (if a mechanical defect contributed); and the owner of the trailer (if different from the carrier). Identifying all responsible parties is critical to maximizing your recovery.
Georgia law allows truck accident victims to recover a broad range of damages, including: past and future medical expenses (surgeries, hospital stays, rehabilitation, medications, home care); lost wages and future earning capacity; pain and suffering; permanent disability and disfigurement; loss of enjoyment of life; loss of consortium (for spouses); and in cases of egregious misconduct, punitive damages. In wrongful death cases, surviving family members may also recover for the full value of the deceased's life under Georgia's wrongful death statute.
We handle truck accident and personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis. That means you pay absolutely nothing out of pocket to hire us. We advance the costs of investigating and litigating your case — including expert witnesses, accident reconstruction, medical record retrieval, and court filing fees. Our attorneys' fee is a percentage of the recovery, and it is only collected if and when we obtain a settlement or verdict in your favor. If we don't recover for you, you owe us nothing.
Almost always, no — at least not without having it reviewed by an independent attorney first. Trucking companies and their insurers make early, lowball offers specifically to settle claims before victims fully understand the extent of their injuries, future medical needs, and lost earning capacity. Once you sign a release, you are permanently barred from seeking additional compensation, even if your condition worsens. Before accepting any settlement offer, speak with us — there is no cost for the consultation.
Yes. In addition to Georgia, ConnerKutchey LLLP handles serious truck accident, catastrophic injury, and wrongful death cases in South Carolina and North Florida. If you were injured in a crash in any of these states, or if the trucking company involved is based in Georgia, contact us to discuss your case. We can also associate with local counsel in other jurisdictions when appropriate to ensure we can pursue every viable avenue of recovery for you.
Commercial truck accident cases differ from ordinary car accident cases in several important ways: the injuries are typically far more severe due to the size and weight of commercial trucks; there are often multiple defendants (driver, company, cargo loader, manufacturer); complex federal FMCSA regulations apply; trucking companies maintain significant insurance coverage (typically $1 million or more); electronic and paper evidence (log books, GPS data, black box data) must be immediately preserved; and the opposition is typically much more sophisticated — with insurance companies and defense firms that specialize in trucking cases. You need an attorney with specific experience in this arena.

Still Have Questions? Call Us Now.

Every case is different. Speak with Mike Conner directly about your specific situation — at no charge.

877-283-2745

Free Case Evaluation

Tell us what happened. We'll review your case at no charge and no obligation — and tell you honestly whether and how we can help.

Call Us — 24/7
877-283-2745

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Our Offices
📍 Savannah, Georgia
17 Park of Commerce Boulevard, Suite 101
Savannah, Georgia 31405
📍 Jesup, Georgia
711 East Cherry Street
Jesup, Georgia 31456
Practice Geography

ConnerKutchey LLLP handles serious truck accident, catastrophic injury, and wrongful death cases throughout Georgia, South Carolina, and North Florida. Distance is no barrier — we come to you.

Our Promise

✓ Free, confidential consultation
✓ No fee unless we recover for you
✓ Speak directly with attorney Mike Conner
✓ We advance all case costs
✓ We move fast — evidence doesn't wait

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Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations

The Rules Trucking Companies
Are Required to Follow — and Often Don't

Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations · FMCSA · DOT

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) administers a comprehensive body of federal regulations governing every aspect of commercial truck operation in the United States. When carriers, drivers, or maintenance companies violate these rules — and cause a crash — those violations are powerful evidence of negligence in a personal injury or wrongful death lawsuit.

⚠️
Why FMCSA Violations Matter in Your Case

When a trucking company or driver violates an FMCSA regulation and that violation causes or contributes to a crash, the violation is evidence of negligence per se under Georgia law. This means the jury can be instructed that the regulatory violation itself establishes a breach of the duty of care. ConnerKutchey LLLP investigates every applicable regulation in every truck crash case — demanding driver logs, ELD data, maintenance records, drug test results, and hiring files through the discovery process.

Key FMCSA Regulations Governing Commercial Trucks

The following regulations — found in Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations — are the most commonly implicated in commercial truck accident litigation.

49 CFR Part 395
Hours of Service (HOS) — Fatigued Driving
😴

Fatigued driving is one of the leading causes of catastrophic truck crashes. The Hours of Service regulations set strict limits on how long a commercial driver may drive and work before mandatory rest periods. Violations are among the most common — and most dangerous — regulatory breaches in the trucking industry.

11-Hour Driving Limit
A commercial driver may drive a maximum of 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty. Driving beyond this limit is a federal violation.
14-Hour On-Duty Window
A driver may not drive beyond the 14th consecutive hour after coming on duty — regardless of whether the driver took breaks during that window.
30-Minute Break Requirement
Drivers who have been on duty for 8 cumulative hours without at least a 30-minute break may not drive until the break is taken.
60/70-Hour Weekly Limit
Drivers may not drive after being on duty 60 hours in 7 days or 70 hours in 8 days. A 34-hour restart provision applies.
10-Hour Off-Duty Requirement
Before any new driving shift, a driver must have at least 10 consecutive hours completely off duty. This is a hard floor — not a suggestion.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
HOS violations are proven through ELD data, paper logbooks, fuel receipts, GPS records, and cell phone records. Carriers often pressure drivers to falsify logs — a practice known as "log book fraud."
49 CFR Part 395.8 / ELD Mandate
Electronic Logging Devices (ELDs)
📱

Since December 2017, most commercial motor vehicles are required to be equipped with FMCSA-registered Electronic Logging Devices that automatically record driving time, engine hours, vehicle movement, miles driven, and location data. ELDs replaced paper logbooks and made falsification far more difficult — though not impossible.

Automatic Data Recording
ELDs automatically sync with the vehicle's engine to record time, date, location, engine hours, and vehicle miles in real time — creating a digital audit trail of every trip.
Data Preservation Obligations
ELD data must be retained for 6 months. Carriers who destroy or fail to preserve this data after a crash may face spoliation sanctions and adverse inference instructions at trial.
Exemptions & Exceptions
Short-haul drivers, drivers of pre-2000 engines, and certain agriculture operations may be exempt. If a carrier falsely claims an exemption to avoid ELD requirements, that is a separate FMCSA violation.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
ELD data is among the first evidence we demand through preservation letters and discovery. It can prove the driver was over-hours, had insufficient rest, or was in a different location than the logbook shows.
49 CFR Part 391
Driver Qualifications — Hiring & Fitness Requirements
🪪

Before putting a driver behind the wheel of a commercial truck, carriers are required by federal law to verify the driver's qualifications. Failure to properly investigate a driver's background, license status, medical fitness, and prior safety record is a form of negligent hiring — a separate basis for carrier liability.

Commercial Driver's License (CDL)
All drivers of CMVs over 26,000 lbs, vehicles carrying hazardous materials, or vehicles designed to carry 16+ passengers must hold a valid CDL with appropriate endorsements.
Medical Examination Certificate
Drivers must pass a physical examination by a FMCSA-certified medical examiner and carry a valid Medical Examiner's Certificate (MEC). The certificate must be renewed at least every 24 months.
Pre-Employment Inquiry
Carriers must query the FMCSA Pre-Employment Screening Program (PSP) and request driving records from each state where the driver held a license in the prior 3 years before hiring.
Annual Review Requirement
Every 12 months, carriers must review each driver's motor vehicle record and recertify that the driver remains qualified under Part 391.
Disqualifying Offenses
Drivers are federally disqualified for DUI convictions, hit-and-run, using a CMV in a felony, multiple serious traffic violations, and railroad grade crossing violations, among others.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
When a carrier hires a driver with a known dangerous record, a lapsed CDL, or without a current medical certificate, that is negligent hiring — and the carrier bears direct liability for the resulting crash.
49 CFR Part 382
Controlled Substances & Alcohol Testing
🧪

Commercial truck drivers are subject to the most comprehensive drug and alcohol testing program in American transportation. A driver operating a CMV while impaired — or a carrier that fails to maintain a proper testing program — is liable for the consequences.

Pre-Employment Testing
Before a CDL driver may perform safety-sensitive functions, the carrier must conduct a pre-employment drug test and receive a verified negative result. Skipping this step is a federal violation.
Post-Accident Testing
After any crash involving a fatality, or a crash where a driver receives a citation and someone is injured or a vehicle is towed, drug and alcohol tests must be administered as soon as practicable — alcohol within 8 hours, drugs within 32 hours.
Random Testing Program
Carriers must maintain a random testing program in which at least 50% of CDL drivers are tested for drugs and 10% for alcohol annually. Drivers selected must be tested immediately upon notification.
BAC Legal Limit — 0.04%
The legal blood alcohol concentration limit for commercial drivers is 0.04% — half the standard 0.08% limit for passenger vehicle drivers. Any detectable alcohol (0.02%+) triggers a 24-hour out-of-service order.
Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse
As of January 2020, carriers must query the FMCSA Drug & Alcohol Clearinghouse before hiring a CDL driver and annually thereafter. Violations are tracked nationally — hiding a positive test is no longer possible.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
Failure to conduct post-accident testing, a positive test result, or a carrier's failure to query the Clearinghouse before hiring an impaired driver are powerful evidence of both negligence and potential punitive damages.
49 CFR Part 396
Vehicle Inspection, Repair & Maintenance
🔧

Carriers are responsible for ensuring that every commercial motor vehicle in their fleet is systematically inspected, maintained, and repaired. Mechanical failures — blown tires, brake failures, steering defects — that cause crashes are often the direct result of maintenance violations.

Pre-Trip & Post-Trip Inspections
Drivers are required to inspect their vehicle before and after every trip, checking brakes, steering, tires, lights, coupling devices, and emergency equipment. A written Driver Vehicle Inspection Report (DVIR) must be completed.
Annual Vehicle Inspection
Every CMV must undergo a comprehensive annual inspection by a qualified inspector. The inspection report must be retained for 14 months and a copy kept on the vehicle.
Brake System Requirements
Brakes must meet strict federal performance standards at all times. A vehicle with brakes out of adjustment, leaking air lines, or defective drums is placed out of service — operating it anyway is a serious federal violation.
Tire Requirements
No CMV may be operated with tires that are flat, have visible cords or fabric, have tread depth below minimum standards, or are mismatched on the same axle. Tire blowouts causing crashes frequently trace to maintenance violations.
Maintenance Record Retention
Carriers must retain all inspection, maintenance, and repair records for at least 1 year after the work is performed and 6 months after the vehicle leaves the fleet. These records are critical crash evidence.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
We subpoena all maintenance records, DVIR logs, and annual inspection reports in every truck crash case. Deferred maintenance, ignored defect reports, and falsified inspection records are powerful evidence of carrier negligence.
49 CFR Part 393, Subpart I
Cargo Securement
📦

Improperly secured cargo shifts during transport, causing trucks to roll over, jackknife, or shed loads onto other vehicles. Federal regulations set detailed requirements for how cargo must be contained, immobilized, and secured for every type of load.

General Securement Standard
All cargo must be immobilized or secured to prevent it from shifting, falling, leaking, or spilling in a manner that could affect the driver's control or endanger other highway users.
Working Load Limits (WLL)
The aggregate Working Load Limit of all tie-downs must be at least one-half the weight of the cargo being secured. Each tie-down must be rated and labeled with its WLL.
Minimum Number of Tie-Downs
Federal regulations specify a minimum number of tie-downs based on cargo weight and length — from 1 tie-down for items under 5 feet and 500 lbs to multiple tie-downs for larger loads.
Commodity-Specific Rules
Part 393 includes detailed rules for specific cargo types including logs, dressed lumber, metal coils, paper rolls, concrete pipe, intermodal containers, automobiles, heavy vehicles, and flatbed loads.
Driver Inspection Obligation
The driver must inspect cargo and securement devices within the first 50 miles of a trip, and re-inspect at each change of duty status and after driving 3 hours or 150 miles.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
Cargo securement violations are often implicated in rollover crashes, load-shift accidents, and falling debris cases. Both the shipper and the carrier can be held liable for improperly loaded freight.
49 CFR Part 387
Minimum Insurance Requirements
🛡️

Federal law mandates minimum levels of financial responsibility for commercial motor vehicle operators. These minimums are substantially higher than those required for passenger vehicles, recognizing the catastrophic damage a large commercial truck can cause.

For-Hire Carriers — General Freight
For-hire carriers transporting general, non-hazardous freight in vehicles over 10,001 lbs must maintain a minimum of $750,000 in public liability coverage. Most national carriers carry $1 million or more.
Hazardous Materials — Higher Limits
Carriers transporting certain hazardous materials must carry between $1 million and $5 million in coverage depending on the material class — oil, radioactive materials, and explosives carry the highest minimums.
Passenger Carriers
Carriers operating vehicles designed to transport 16 or more passengers must carry $5 million in liability insurance regardless of the vehicle's size.
MCS-90 Endorsement
Every regulated carrier's insurance policy must include an MCS-90 endorsement — a federally required form that makes the insurer directly responsible to injured members of the public regardless of policy exclusions.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
The mandatory minimums are often far exceeded by the actual damages in catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases. We investigate all available insurance coverage — including umbrella policies, owner-operator policies, and shipper coverage — to maximize recovery for our clients.
49 CFR Part 393.55 / Proposed Rulemaking
Speed Limiters & Vehicle Speed Compliance

Excessive speed is a contributing factor in a large percentage of fatal truck crashes. Federal regulations address speed through a combination of brake performance standards, speed limiter requirements for newer vehicles, and state speed laws that are enforced as federal safety violations.

Electronic Speed Limiters
The FMCSA has proposed regulations requiring speed limiting devices on CMVs manufactured after 2003. Many major carriers already require their fleets to be governed at 65 mph or lower. Tampering with or disabling a speed limiter is a violation.
Brake Performance Standards
Under 49 CFR § 393.52, loaded CMVs must be able to stop from 20 mph within 35 feet. Brake systems that cannot meet this standard are out-of-compliance and the vehicle must be placed out of service.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
ECM (black box) data from the truck's engine control module captures vehicle speed at impact, brake application timing, cruise control status, and throttle position — providing an objective record of driver behavior in the seconds before the crash.
49 CFR Parts 171–180
Hazardous Materials Transportation
☢️

Trucks transporting hazardous materials — flammable liquids, explosives, radioactive materials, corrosives, poisons, and compressed gases — are subject to an additional layer of federal regulation governing labeling, placarding, packaging, routing, and driver training.

HazMat Endorsement Required
Drivers transporting hazardous materials in quantities requiring placarding must hold a Hazardous Materials (H) CDL endorsement, which requires background investigation and TSA security threat assessment.
Placarding Requirements
Vehicles must display standardized DOT placards identifying the hazard class of the materials being transported. Improper or missing placards are violations that can contribute to delays in emergency response.
Routing Restrictions
Certain hazardous materials — radioactive materials, explosives — are subject to federally designated routing requirements. Carriers must select routes that minimize exposure to populated areas.
⚖️ Litigation Relevance
HazMat crashes involving fuel tankers, chemical carriers, or other regulated materials can result in fires, explosions, and toxic exposure — dramatically increasing damages. The carrier, shipper, and loader can all bear liability.

The Carriers with the Highest Crash Numbers in America

The FMCSA tracks every reported crash involving commercial motor vehicles through its SAFER System. The following data reflects the two-year period ending April 2025 — the most current publicly available figures. Fleet size matters: larger fleets log more miles and generate higher raw crash counts. But the fatal crash rate per million miles reveals which carriers are truly the most dangerous.

📊
Data Source & Methodology

All crash statistics are drawn directly from the FMCSA SAFER System (safer.fmcsa.dot.gov) — the official federal database for commercial motor carrier safety records. Figures represent the 24-month rolling window ending April 2025. Crash data includes all state-reported crashes involving the carrier's vehicles. Because the FMCSA considers data preliminary for up to 22 months, figures are subject to revision. "Fatal crash" means a crash in which at least one person died — not the total number of fatalities, which may be higher.

FMCSA SAFER System · 24 Months Ending April 2025
Top 10 Carriers by Total Crash Count — United States
🚛
# Carrier Total Crashes Fatal Crashes Injury Crashes Tow-Away
1
United Parcel Service (UPS)
100,000+ vehicles · Package delivery
2,460 72 824 1,564
2
J.B. Hunt Transport Inc.
22,500+ vehicles · Intermodal & freight
1,634 54 523 1,057
3
FedEx Express Corp.
102,000+ vehicles · Package/freight delivery
1,505 31 510 964
4
Swift Transportation Co. of Arizona LLC
15,900+ vehicles · Truckload freight
890 35 259 596
5
Werner Enterprises Inc.
~10,500 drivers · Long-haul truckload
813 21 230 562
6
Schneider National Carriers Inc.
Orange fleet · Truckload & intermodal
723 11 242 470
7
Estes Express Lines
~8,000 drivers · LTL freight
572 12 169 391
8
U.S. Xpress Inc.
5,400+ vehicles · Truckload carrier
511 13 158 340
9
Averitt Express Inc.
⚠️ Highest fatal crash rate per million miles among major carriers listed
325 9 94 222
10
CRST Expedited Inc.
Team driving · Expedited freight
275 9 89 177
Source: FMCSA SAFER System (safer.fmcsa.dot.gov) — 24-month rolling window ending April 2025. "Fatal crash" = a crash resulting in at least one fatality; does not represent total number of deaths, which may be higher. Data considered preliminary by FMCSA for up to 22 months and subject to revision. Raw crash totals reflect fleet size; fatal crash rates per million miles traveled are a more accurate measure of safety performance.
🔍 What These Numbers Mean
Raw crash totals are heavily influenced by fleet size. UPS operates over 100,000 vehicles — of course its total crash number is high. What matters more in litigation is the fatal crash rate per million miles traveled, which normalizes for exposure. Averitt, despite ranking 9th in total crashes, has one of the highest fatal crash rates per million miles of any major carrier.
📋 How to Look Up Any Carrier
The FMCSA SAFER System at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov is free and publicly searchable. Enter any carrier's name or DOT number to see their current safety rating, crash history, inspection results, and out-of-service order rates. This is step one in any truck accident investigation — and we run it immediately on every case.
⚖️ If One of These Companies Hit You
These are well-funded corporations with experienced defense teams and large insurance carriers behind them. Prior crash history, CSA scores, and FMCSA violation records are all available to your attorney — and to a jury. ConnerKutchey LLLP knows how to find and use this data to build your case. Call 877-283-2745 today.

What Trucking Companies Pay When They Break the Rules

The FMCSA brings enforcement actions against carriers following compliance reviews, terminal audits, roadside inspections, and crash investigations. When violations are found, the agency issues a Notice of Claim — and carriers pay or face a Final Agency Order. Here is what that costs.

49 CFR Part 386 · Annual Inflation Adjustment
How FMCSA Civil Penalties Are Calculated
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Under the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act, the FMCSA adjusts its civil penalty amounts annually. The 2024 penalty schedule (effective December 28, 2023) increased fines by a multiplier of 1.03241 over 2023 levels. The 2025 schedule (effective December 30, 2024) added a further 1.02598 increase. When calculating a fine, the FMCSA weighs six factors: the nature of the violation, its gravity/seriousness, the carrier's culpability, prior violation history, the carrier's ability to pay, and other matters of justice and public safety.

Statutory Minimum Penalty (2024)
The floor for any FMCSA civil penalty increased to $1,086 per violation in 2024, up from $1,052 in 2023. Even a single paperwork violation can trigger this minimum.
Ordinary Maximum Penalty (2024)
The standard maximum for a single violation rose to $35,516 in 2024 (from $34,401 in 2023). Most carriers do not pay the maximum — but serious, repeated violations approach it.
Aggravated Maximum Penalty (2024)
For egregious or knowing violations — such as knowingly operating an unsafe vehicle or falsifying records — the aggravated maximum jumped to $142,063 per violation in 2024.
Out-of-Service Order Violations
Requiring or permitting a driver to operate under an out-of-service order: $23,048 per violation (2024). Operating a vehicle placed out of service: $2,304 per violation.
Recordkeeping Violations (Daily)
Recordkeeping violations accrue daily. The maximum daily penalty in 2025 is $1,584 per day, with a total cap of $15,846 for a single continuous violation.
CDL Violations
Violations related to commercial driver's license requirements reached $6,974 per violation in 2024. Allowing a driver without a valid CDL to operate a CMV triggers this penalty per occurrence.
DOT Enforcement Data · 2020–2023
The 15 Most-Fined FMCSA Violations — and What Carriers Actually Pay
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The following table, drawn from FMCSA enforcement data covering 2020–2023, shows the violations most commonly resulting in monetary fines after a DOT audit or compliance review — along with the average penalty assessed and the highest single penalty paid by any one carrier during that four-year period. These are violations that every truck accident attorney examines in the immediate aftermath of a serious crash.

# Violation CFR Citation Avg. Penalty Top Penalty Paid
1 Making or allowing a driver to make a false report regarding duty status (logbook fraud) 395.8(e)(1) $7,020 $40,420
2 Allowing or requiring someone to drive without a current, valid CDL 383.37(a) $3,410 $17,700
3 Using a driver before receiving a negative pre-employment drug test result 382.301(a) $5,329 $15,410
4 Failing to require a driver to prepare a record of duty status (Hours of Service logs) 395.8(a)(1) $5,956 $72,900
5 Failing to systematically inspect, repair, and maintain vehicles 396.3(a) $4,404 $21,550
6 Failing to implement an alcohol and/or drug testing program 382.305 $6,231 $15,870
7 Failing to implement drug/alcohol testing program — foreign carriers 382.115(a) $5,885 $15,876
8 Allowing or requiring unsafe operation of a commercial motor vehicle 396.7(a) $2,965 $12,030
9 Failing to maintain initial driving record in driver's qualification file 391.51(b)(2) $753 $3,600
10 Using a driver known to have tested positive for controlled substances 382.215 $7,543 $18,170
11 Failing to keep drivers' records of duty status or supporting documents for 6 months 395.8(k)(1) $4,403 $18,060
12 Failing to conduct random drug testing at the required annual rate 382.305(b)(2) $6,826 $42,210
13 Operating a CMV after refusing to undergo a new-entrant safety audit 385.337(b) $3,460 $15,410
14 Failing to keep minimum inspection and maintenance records 396.3(b) $949 $6,480
15 Operating a CMV in violation of a new-entrant out-of-service order 385.331 $3,264 $6,930
Source: DOT/FMCSA Enforcement Management Information System (EMIS) data, violations resulting in fines after audit, 2020–2023. Data compiled by the National Truckers Association. Penalty figures do not include subsequent annual inflation adjustments effective in 2024 and 2025.
FMCSA Enforcement Process
From Violation to Verdict: How FMCSA Fines Become Trial Evidence
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A trucking company's FMCSA enforcement history is public record — and it is among the first things ConnerKutchey LLLP investigates after a serious truck crash. A carrier with a pattern of prior violations, paid penalties, or out-of-service orders has a documented history of safety indifference. That history is admissible, and juries hear it.

How Enforcement Cases Begin
FMCSA cases are triggered by compliance reviews, terminal audits, roadside inspections, complaint investigations, or crash investigations. The agency can appear unannounced — and offsite audits surged 400% between 2019 and 2020, with carriers given as little as 48 hours to produce digital records.
Notice of Claim (NOC)
When violations are found, FMCSA issues a Notice of Claim — the formal start of civil enforcement. A carrier can pay the penalty in full, sign a settlement agreement, or default and receive a Final Agency Order. Closed cases are publicly accessible in the FMCSA enforcement database.
CSA Safety Scores
The FMCSA's Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program tracks seven BASIC categories of carrier performance: Unsafe Driving, HOS Compliance, Vehicle Maintenance, Driver Fitness, Controlled Substances, Hazardous Materials, and Crash Indicator. Carriers with poor scores are targeted for increased scrutiny.
Criminal Exposure — Beyond Civil Fines
A pattern of serious violations plus a fatal crash can trigger DOJ criminal referral. Falsification of ELD data, driver logs, or drug test records is a federal crime under 18 U.S.C. § 1001. Carrier executives have been personally indicted and imprisoned for systemic safety violations that led to fatalities.
Look Up Any Carrier's Record
The FMCSA SAFER System (safer.fmcsa.dot.gov) is a free public database. Enter any carrier's DOT number to see safety ratings, inspection history, crash data, and out-of-service orders. An attorney can access far more comprehensive historical records through discovery.
⚖️ Why This Matters for Your Case
Every paid FMCSA fine is an admission that a violation occurred. Prior violations in the same category as the crash — especially HOS falsification, drug testing failures, or maintenance violations — are devastating evidence of a carrier's pattern of disregard for safety. We find them. We use them.

Was the Truck Driver Breaking Federal Rules When They Hit You?

ConnerKutchey LLLP immediately requests preservation of all ELD data, black box data, driver qualification files, drug test records, and maintenance logs in every truck crash case. Evidence disappears fast — every hour counts.

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Updated Regularly · Recent Truck Crashes

Truck Crashes In the News

The following are recent serious truck crashes reported in Georgia, South Carolina, North Florida, and the Southeast — the geographic areas where ConnerKutchey LLLP represents truck accident victims. This page is updated regularly to reflect current incidents. If you or a family member was involved in any of these crashes, or a similar one, call us immediately at 877-283-2745.

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Verdicts & Settlements Database — News-Sourced

Browse reported verdicts and settlements in commercial truck accident cases — all sourced from credible news organizations and industry publications, not law firm websites. Includes trend data, Georgia-specific outcomes, and nuclear verdict analysis.

⚖️ Open Verdicts Database →
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Full Crash Database — 100+ Reports

Browse the complete searchable database of commercial truck crashes reported by local television stations, newspapers, and the Truck Safety Coalition. Filter by state, year, crash type, and more. Updated regularly.

📋 Open Crash Database →
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Were You Involved in One of These Crashes? Trucking companies and their insurers deploy investigators and legal teams within hours of a serious crash. Physical evidence disappears fast — black box data can be overwritten within days, and driver logs are only required to be retained for 6 months. If you or a family member was injured in a truck crash — recent or otherwise — call ConnerKutchey LLLP at 877-283-2745 for an immediate, free, and confidential consultation. Time is critical.

Recent Truck Crashes in Our Region

The following incidents were reported by local television stations, newspapers, and wire services. ConnerKutchey LLLP did not investigate these specific crashes unless retained by a victim or family. These reports are provided for public information and to illustrate the ongoing danger of commercial truck operations on Southeast highways.

📍 Georgia
March 26, 2026
🚛 Multi-Vehicle Crash
Two Tractor-Trailers and Two Cars Collide on I-16 — Effingham County, GA
Interstate 16 Westbound · Near Exit 148 / Old River Road · Effingham County, Georgia

A major crash involving two tractor-trailers and two passenger vehicles shut down the westbound lanes of Interstate 16 in Effingham County, Georgia on the morning of March 26, 2026. The Effingham County Sheriff's Office and Georgia State Patrol responded to the scene near Exit 148 at Old River Road around 10:30 a.m. Westbound lanes were closed for approximately one hour before reopening to one lane. Both passenger cars were towed from the scene; the two tractor-trailers were able to depart under their own power. The road fully reopened before noon. No injuries were reported by either the Effingham County Sheriff's Office or the Georgia State Patrol.

📍 North Carolina
March 2026
🚛 Lane-Closing Crash
Tractor-Trailer Crash Closes Lanes on I-40 East — Durham, North Carolina
Interstate 40 East · Near Fayetteville Road · Durham County, North Carolina

A tractor-trailer crash on Interstate 40 eastbound near Fayetteville Road in Durham County closed multiple lanes of traffic, according to WRAL news. WRAL's Sky 5 flew over the scene, where the tractor-trailer was seen blocking two lanes of traffic. Another vehicle was involved in the crash. Crews worked to remove the tractor-trailer from the roadway, and the lanes were subsequently reopened. The crash triggered significant backups on one of the Triangle region's busiest commuter and freight corridors.

📍 South Carolina
March 16, 2026
🔄 Rollover / Entrapment
Tractor-Trailer Overturns on I-526 Westbound — North Charleston, South Carolina
Interstate 526 Westbound · Near Charleston International Airport · North Charleston, South Carolina

A tractor-trailer rollover on Interstate 526 westbound near the Charleston International Airport in North Charleston closed the road for approximately three hours on the morning of March 16, 2026. The South Carolina Highway Patrol investigated the incident, which was reported as a rollover with entrapment. Social media footage showed the tractor-trailer toppled onto its side, blocking nearly all interstate lanes. All lanes of I-526 west had been closed since approximately 6:30 a.m.; the road reopened around 9:30 a.m. as cleanup continued. Traffic slowdowns persisted on neighboring roadways well after lanes reopened.

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Know About a Recent Truck Crash?

This page is updated regularly with truck crash reports from Georgia, South Carolina, North Florida, and the broader Southeast. If you know of a recent serious truck crash that belongs here, or if you or a family member was injured in one of the crashes listed above, contact ConnerKutchey LLLP. There is no fee for a consultation, and no obligation to retain our services.

📞 877-283-2745

When One Happens to You — Call Immediately

Evidence is time-sensitive. The trucking company's team is already at work. ConnerKutchey LLLP moves fast — because your case depends on it.

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FMCSA Data · Georgia Highways

Common Types of Truck Accidents in Georgia

According to the FMCSA's most recent annual truck accident statistics report, a collision with a moving vehicle was the first harmful event — resulting in injury or property damage — in a large majority of crashes involving large trucks. Understanding how a crash happened is the foundation of every liability investigation ConnerKutchey LLLP conducts.

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Why Crash Type Matters in Litigation: The type of collision determines which regulations were likely violated, what physical evidence to preserve, which experts are needed, and who beyond the driver may be liable. A jackknife points to brake maintenance violations and speeding. A rear-end crash points to hours-of-service violations and following distance. An underride may implicate guard standards and IIHS safety data. ConnerKutchey LLLP begins every truck crash investigation by reconstructing the sequence of events — starting with the first harmful event.

Crashes Between Trucks & Other Vehicles

The most common truck crash type involves a collision between a commercial motor vehicle and one or more other motor vehicles. These crashes account for the majority of serious injuries and fatalities on Georgia's highways.

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01
Rear-End Accidents

A rear-end accident happens when a truck fails to slow or stop in time to avoid hitting the vehicle it is following. Heavy commercial trucks require dramatically more stopping distance than passenger cars — a fully loaded 80,000-lb tractor-trailer traveling at 65 mph needs nearly 525 feet to come to a complete stop, compared to approximately 316 feet for a passenger car.

Tailgating — following too closely — is a particularly reckless practice for commercial truck drivers. Driving while fatigued or drowsy and distracted driving (including cell phone use) are also leading causes of rear-end accidents. In some cases, post-crash investigation reveals brake system failure as a contributing factor.

Common Causes
🕐 Driver fatigue / HOS violation
📱 Distracted driving
🚗 Following too closely
🔧 Brake system failure
🌧️ Failure to adjust for weather
⚡ Excessive speed
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 392.14 — Hazardous conditions
49 CFR § 395 — Hours of Service
49 CFR § 396 — Brake maintenance
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02
Sideswipe Accidents

A sideswipe occurs when the sides of two vehicles collide, typically during a lane change or when a truck drifts out of its lane. Truck drivers get into sideswipe accidents by failing to check mirrors before changing lanes, by oversteering in curves and encroaching on vehicles in neighboring lanes, or by misjudging the wide turning radius of their trailer.

A tractor-trailer's trailer can swing wider than the cab, creating a hazard that is invisible to drivers in adjacent lanes. Abruptly accelerating or suddenly braking can cause a truck's cab or trailer to skid outside of its lane — a phenomenon called "trailer swing" — and sideswipe nearby vehicles with devastating force.

Common Causes
🪟 Failure to check blind spots
🔀 Unsafe lane change
🌀 Oversteering / trailer swing
💤 Drowsy / distracted driving
🌧️ Slippery road conditions
🛑 Sudden braking
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 392.9 — Cargo securement
49 CFR § 395 — Hours of Service
O.C.G.A. § 40-6-123 — Lane change
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03
Side-Impact / T-Bone Crashes

A side-impact crash — also called an angle collision or T-bone — occurs when the front of a truck strikes the side of another vehicle. These crashes are among the most dangerous for occupants of the struck vehicle because the side of a passenger car offers far less structural protection than the front or rear.

The full weight and momentum of the truck is concentrated at the point of impact when it T-bones another vehicle. Side-impact crashes commonly occur at intersections when a truck runs a red light or stop sign, fails to yield, or is traveling at excessive speed. A vehicle struck squarely in the side by a loaded 18-wheeler has virtually no structural buffer between its occupants and the point of impact.

Common Causes
🚦 Running red lights / stop signs
🔀 Failure to yield
⚡ Excessive intersection speed
💤 Fatigued / impaired driving
🔧 Brake failure
📱 Distracted driving
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 392.10 — Railroad crossings
49 CFR § 395 — Hours of Service
O.C.G.A. § 40-6-20 — Traffic signals
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04
Underride Crashes

The undercarriage of a commercial trailer sits high enough above the road for a passenger car to be pushed underneath it during a collision. In an underride crash, the upper portion of a car may be crushed or sheared off entirely — leaving anyone sitting upright in the vehicle exposed to catastrophic and frequently fatal head, neck, and chest injuries.

Federal regulations require most large commercial trucks to have rear underride guards (49 CFR § 393.86), but according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), current U.S. standards do not provide full protection — particularly in off-center impacts and side underride situations, where no guard is required at all. Underrides occur in rear-end collisions and in side-impact or T-bone crashes at intersections.

Key Regulation & Research
49 CFR § 393.86 — Rear underride guards
IIHS Underride Research
NHTSA FMVSS No. 223/224
⚠️ Critical Evidence Issue
The condition, height, and strength of a truck's rear underride guard must be preserved and inspected immediately after a crash. Guard defects, improper height, and failure to meet FMVSS standards are independent bases for liability against both the carrier and the trailer manufacturer.
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05
Head-On Collisions

A head-on collision — in which the front ends of two vehicles collide — is among the most deadly crash types because the weight and speed of both vehicles combine to amplify the force of impact. When a commercial truck crosses the centerline into oncoming traffic, the result is almost always catastrophic for the occupants of the opposing vehicle.

Because a fully loaded 18-wheeler can weigh up to 80,000 lbs — 20 to 30 times heavier than a typical passenger car — the passenger car occupant absorbs a vastly disproportionate share of the collision force. Typically, when a truck driver crosses the centerline, it is because the driver has dozed off due to fatigue or is severely impaired, or because the driver was distracted by a cell phone or other device at the moment of impact.

Common Causes
💤 Driver fell asleep — fatigue
🍺 Impaired driving (alcohol/drugs)
📱 Cell phone / distraction
⚡ Excessive speed
🌨️ Weather / road conditions
🔧 Steering / tire failure
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 395 — Hours of Service
49 CFR § 382 — Drug & Alcohol Testing
49 CFR § 392.82 — Cell phone use

When Trucks Lose Control

Some of the most catastrophic truck crashes involve the truck itself losing control — striking other vehicles, barriers, or pedestrians, or shedding cargo that causes secondary crashes. These crashes frequently involve multiple liable parties beyond the driver alone.

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06
Jackknife Accidents

A jackknifed truck is one in which the cab and trailer have folded toward each other at the hitch point — like a closing pocketknife. When the trailer swings inward around the truck's center of gravity, the motion is called a "yaw." A jackknife locks the truck and trailer at a dangerous angle, often sweeping across multiple lanes of traffic.

Jackknife accidents typically occur when the truck loses traction — most often due to sudden hard braking, excessive speed in rain, snow, or ice, or misjudging a sharp curve or highway ramp. Brake system imbalances between the cab and trailer, overloaded trailers, and improperly distributed cargo can also contribute to jackknifing, shifting liability to the carrier or cargo loader.

Common Causes
🛑 Sudden hard braking
⚡ Excessive speed — curves/ramps
🌨️ Slippery road surface
🔧 Brake imbalance / failure
📦 Overloaded / shifted cargo
🌊 Hydroplaning
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 393 — Cargo Securement
49 CFR § 396 — Brake Maintenance
49 CFR § 392.14 — Hazardous conditions
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07
Rollover Accidents

Large commercial trucks have a significantly higher risk of rolling over than passenger vehicles because their height creates a high center of gravity that makes them inherently less stable — particularly when carrying tall or unevenly distributed loads. A truck rolling onto its side or roof at highway speed can crush other vehicles in adjacent lanes and block multiple lanes of traffic.

Truck rollovers most commonly occur when a driver rounds a curve too fast, including on highway entrance and exit ramps. In extreme cases, high crosswinds can contribute to tipping a large, lightly loaded trailer. Improperly secured or shifted cargo raises the center of gravity further and dramatically increases rollover risk. A rollover that triggers a fuel fire adds HazMat contamination and catastrophic fire injury to an already devastating crash scenario.

Common Causes
⚡ Excessive speed on curves/ramps
📦 High or shifted cargo load
🌬️ High crosswinds
🛑 Sudden evasive steering
🔧 Tire blowout
💤 Driver fatigue / inattention
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR § 393 — Cargo Securement
49 CFR § 396.3 — Tire Maintenance
49 CFR § 395 — Hours of Service
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08
Cargo Shifts & Spills

When cargo has not been properly secured in accordance with 49 CFR Part 393, it can come loose and suddenly shift during a turn, a sudden stop, or on a steep grade. The abrupt movement of thousands of pounds of cargo can throw a large truck or its trailer off balance and cause the driver to lose control entirely.

If a cargo shift leads to a spill, unsecured freight can strike other vehicles in traffic directly — and can also cause secondary crashes when other drivers swerve or brake suddenly to avoid debris in the roadway. Hazardous material (HazMat) spills present additional dangers including toxic exposure, environmental contamination, and fire risk. In cargo cases, liability may extend beyond the carrier to the shipper, freight broker, or loading company that improperly loaded or documented the cargo.

Common Causes
🔗 Insufficient tie-downs
⚖️ Overloaded or unbalanced load
📋 Improper loading documentation
🛑 Sudden braking / sharp turns
☢️ HazMat mislabeling
🏗️ Negligent loading company
Potentially Violated Regulations
49 CFR Part 393 — Cargo Securement
49 CFR Parts 171–180 — HazMat
49 CFR § 392.9 — Driver inspection duty

High-Risk Corridors on Georgia's Highways

Georgia is a major national freight corridor. Interstate highways I-16, I-75, I-95, and I-285 carry some of the highest commercial truck traffic volumes in the Southeast. Crashes involving 18-wheelers on these corridors — particularly in the Savannah port area, the I-16/I-75 interchange, and Atlanta metro interchanges — are frequently investigated by the Georgia State Patrol's specialized Motor Carrier Compliance Division.

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I-95 Corridor
High-volume coastal freight route — Savannah port traffic, Florida-bound carriers
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I-75 / I-16
Central Georgia freight spine — Atlanta to Savannah, high jackknife and rollover risk
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I-285 Atlanta
High-congestion urban beltway — rear-end and sideswipe crashes in heavy traffic
Port of Savannah
Largest container port on East Coast — concentrated truck traffic in Chatham County

The Type of Crash Determines Who Is Liable

Beyond the driver, liability in truck crash cases may extend to the carrier, the maintenance company, the cargo loader, the shipper, the trailer manufacturer, or the fleet owner. ConnerKutchey LLLP investigates every angle — starting immediately after the crash.

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Commercial Motor Vehicles · Georgia Highways

Types of Commercial Trucks Involved in Serious Wrecks

Not all commercial trucks are alike — and the type of truck involved in a crash directly affects the applicable regulations, the available insurance coverage, the identity of liable parties, and the severity of injuries. ConnerKutchey LLLP handles serious cases involving every category of commercial motor vehicle operating in Georgia, South Carolina, and North Florida.

What Is a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV)?

Large or heavy trucks — commonly called semi-trucks, semi-trailers, tractor-trailers, 18-wheelers, or big rigs — are commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) that weigh 10,000 pounds or more unloaded. Vehicles transporting hazardous materials requiring placarding are also CMVs regardless of weight. Passenger buses and other vehicles designed to carry more than 15 passengers are also regulated as CMVs under federal law. All CMVs operating in interstate commerce are subject to FMCSA regulations — and a crash involving any of the vehicles below triggers the full weight of federal trucking law.

Common CMVs Involved in Serious Georgia Crashes

The following commercial vehicle types are the most frequently involved in catastrophic crashes on Georgia's highways and roads. Each carries distinct legal considerations, insurance structures, and regulatory obligations.

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01
Tractor-Trailers (18-Wheelers)
Also known as: semi-trucks, big rigs, semi-trailers, tractor-trailers, 18-wheelers

The most common large commercial vehicle on American highways, a tractor-trailer combines a powered tractor unit with a detachable trailer. A fully loaded 18-wheeler can weigh up to 80,000 lbs — up to 30 times the weight of a typical passenger car — and requires up to 525 feet to stop at highway speed. Tractor-trailers are subject to the full range of FMCSA regulations including hours of service, ELD requirements, driver qualification standards, and cargo securement rules. Liability in a tractor-trailer crash may extend to the trucking company, the trailer owner (often a separate entity), the shipper, and the cargo loader.

Up to 80,000 lbs GVWR Full FMCSA Jurisdiction Multiple Liable Parties ELD Required
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02
Tanker Trucks
Including: liquid tankers, chemical tankers, milk tankers, food-grade tankers

Tanker trucks carry liquid or gaseous cargo in a cylindrical tank — including food products, industrial chemicals, water, and hazardous materials. The liquid load of a tanker shifts during turns and braking, creating a destabilizing "surge" effect that makes tankers particularly prone to rollovers and jackknifes. Drivers of liquid tankers require a Tanker (N) CDL endorsement, and those carrying hazardous materials must also hold a HazMat endorsement. A tanker rollover can result not only in catastrophic injury but in massive chemical spills, fire, and environmental contamination.

Tanker CDL Endorsement Required High Rollover Risk Liquid Surge Dynamics HazMat Rules May Apply
03
Fuel Trucks
Also: gasoline tankers, petroleum transport trucks, fuel delivery vehicles

Fuel trucks transport gasoline, diesel, aviation fuel, and other flammable petroleum products — making them among the most dangerous commercial vehicles on the road when involved in a crash. Fuel tanker crashes can trigger catastrophic explosions and fires, turning an already serious collision into a mass casualty event. Fuel trucks are subject to the strictest HazMat regulations under 49 CFR Parts 171–180, require specialized CDL endorsements, and must follow federally designated hazmat routes. The carrier, the fuel company, and the shipper may all face liability after a fuel truck crash causing injury or property damage.

Flammable / Explosive Cargo HazMat CDL Endorsement Designated Route Requirements $1M–$5M Min. Insurance
04
Port of Savannah Trucks
Including: container chassis trucks, drayage trucks, intermodal carriers, port tractors

The Port of Savannah is the largest and fastest-growing container port on the U.S. East Coast, generating enormous volumes of heavy truck traffic on I-95, I-16, Highway 17, and the local Savannah road network. Port drayage trucks — short-haul tractors moving loaded shipping containers between the port and nearby distribution centers — operate under intense time pressure, often with heavy container loads approaching maximum legal weight. Drivers may be owner-operators with limited insurance, and the container owner, the shipping line, and the terminal operator may all be additional sources of liability beyond the immediate carrier.

Savannah/Coastal Georgia Intermodal Container Loads Owner-Operator Liability Issues Multiple Party Claims
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05
Box Trucks
Also: straight trucks, cube vans, moving trucks, step vans

Box trucks — also called straight trucks or cube vans — are single-unit trucks with an enclosed rectangular cargo area attached directly to the cab. Box trucks are widely used for local deliveries, furniture moving, and retail logistics. While smaller than a tractor-trailer, box trucks can weigh 26,000 lbs or more and cause devastating injuries in a crash. Trucks over 26,000 lbs require a commercial driver's license. Many box trucks are operated by smaller companies or independent contractors with minimum insurance coverage, making it essential to identify all parties in the ownership and insurance chain after a crash.

Up to 26,000+ lbs CDL Required Over 26,000 lbs Local Delivery Operations Contractor Liability Issues
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06
Cement Mixers
Also: concrete mixer trucks, ready-mix trucks, transit mixers

Concrete mixer trucks carry a rotating drum loaded with wet concrete — a massive, shifting load that creates handling challenges unique to this vehicle type. A fully loaded cement mixer can weigh over 40,000 lbs, with the drum's continuous rotation affecting the truck's center of gravity and stability. Cement mixers operate heavily in urban construction zones and on local roads — precisely where pedestrian and cyclist traffic creates additional exposure. The rotating drum also creates significant blind spots on both sides. After a cement mixer crash, the construction company that owns the truck, the concrete supplier, and the general contractor may all have legal exposure.

40,000+ lbs with Load Shifting Drum Load Construction Zone Operations Multiple Contractor Liability
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07
Cargo Vans
Including: sprinter vans, full-size cargo vans, gig economy delivery vans

Cargo vans — including the high-roof sprinter vans now ubiquitous in last-mile delivery — occupy a legally complex middle ground. Smaller cargo vans may fall below the CDL threshold but still operate as commercial vehicles for FMCSA purposes if used in interstate commerce. The explosive growth of gig economy delivery (Amazon Flex, DoorDash, USPS contractors) has created a large fleet of cargo vans operated by independent drivers carrying limited personal auto insurance. Identifying whether a gig delivery driver's personal policy, the delivery platform's commercial policy, or a shipper's contingent coverage applies is one of the first critical questions after a cargo van crash.

Gig Economy Liability Issues Insurance Gap Risks Interstate Commerce Rules Amazon / Contractor Claims
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08
Delivery Trucks
Including: UPS, FedEx, Amazon, USPS fleet vehicles, LTL delivery trucks

Major national carriers — UPS, FedEx, Amazon, and the U.S. Postal Service — operate massive delivery truck fleets that collectively account for thousands of crashes annually. As detailed in the FMCSA crash data on this site, UPS alone recorded 2,460 total crashes in a recent 24-month period, including 72 fatal crashes. Delivery trucks operate on tight schedules that incentivize speeding, rolling stops, and dangerous backing maneuvers. Large carriers are self-insured or carry substantial commercial policies — and have experienced legal teams that begin working against injured victims within hours of a crash. Equally experienced representation is essential from the start.

High-Volume Crash History Carrier Self-Insurance Rapid Defense Deployment Schedule Pressure Culture
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09
Dump Trucks
Including: articulated dump trucks, transfer dump trucks, side-dump trailers

Dump trucks carry loose bulk materials — dirt, gravel, sand, demolition debris, and construction waste — and are a common sight on Georgia's active construction corridors. Dump trucks present unique hazards: shifting loads that can cause rollovers, unsecured material falling from raised beds onto trailing vehicles, and heavily contaminated air brakes from job-site dust and debris. A dump truck operating with its bed inadvertently raised can strike overhead structures, power lines, and bridges with catastrophic results. Many dump trucks operate for subcontractors on construction projects, creating complex multi-party liability chains involving the general contractor, project owner, and subcontractor.

Falling Debris Hazard Construction Site Operations Subcontractor Liability Brake Contamination Risk
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10
Flatbed Trucks
Including: step-deck trailers, drop-deck trailers, RGN (lowboy) trailers

Flatbed trailers carry oversized and irregularly shaped loads — steel coils, lumber, construction equipment, pipe, vehicles, and machinery — that cannot be enclosed in a standard trailer. The open platform design means that every piece of cargo must be actively secured with chains, straps, binders, and edge protectors meeting specific Working Load Limit requirements under 49 CFR Part 393. A load that breaks free from a flatbed at highway speed becomes a deadly projectile. Oversized loads require special permits, escort vehicles, and route pre-approval — failures in any of these requirements create additional grounds for liability.

Cargo Securement Critical Oversized Load Permits Falling Load Projectile Risk 49 CFR Part 393 Applies
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11
Garbage & Solid-Waste Trucks
Including: rear-loader, side-loader, front-loader, and roll-off trucks

Garbage and solid-waste trucks operate in residential and commercial neighborhoods at low speeds but create disproportionate pedestrian and cyclist risk due to their frequent stops, wide turning radius, and massive blind spots. A rear-loader garbage truck backing up or making a wide right turn in a residential area can strike pedestrians, cyclists, and parked cars with little warning. Solid-waste trucks operated by municipal governments trigger special sovereign immunity considerations in Georgia — the state's Tort Claims Act and local government immunity provisions can limit or modify liability, making experienced legal counsel essential from the very beginning of a solid-waste truck injury claim.

Pedestrian & Cyclist Danger Municipal Immunity Issues O.C.G.A. § 50-21-20 et seq. Backing Accident Risk
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Car Carriers
Also: auto transport trucks, vehicle transport trailers, open or enclosed carriers

Car carriers — the multi-level open trailers commonly seen hauling new vehicles from manufacturer to dealership — are among the widest and longest vehicles operating on public highways, with loaded lengths often exceeding 75 feet and heights approaching 14 feet. The multiple vehicles loaded on a carrier shift the overall weight distribution and raise the center of gravity significantly. A car carrier that rolls over or jackknifes can scatter multiple unsecured vehicles across multiple lanes. The automobile manufacturer, the dealership, and the transport company may each have independent insurance obligations after a car carrier crash.

75+ ft. Overall Length High Rollover Risk Vehicle Load Securement Multi-Party Insurance
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Log Carriers
Also: logging trucks, timber transport trucks, pulpwood trucks

Log carriers transport harvested timber from forests to mills and are common on rural highways in South Georgia — particularly in the timber-rich counties of Wayne, Ware, Brantley, Pierce, and Appling that surround Jesup. A log truck loaded with freshly cut timber can weigh significantly more than 80,000 lbs, and logs are notoriously difficult to secure with conventional tie-down equipment. A single log breaking free from a carrier at highway speed can be fatal. Log truck drivers often work as independent operators with limited personal coverage, and Georgia's workers' compensation rules for logging operations add further complexity to the liability analysis.

South Georgia / Jesup Region 80,000+ lbs Gross Weight Log Ejection Risk Independent Operator Issues
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Passenger Buses
Including: school buses, charter buses, transit buses, tour buses, over-the-road coaches

Any vehicle designed to transport more than 15 passengers is regulated as a CMV under federal law, regardless of weight. Passenger buses operated for commercial purposes — charter buses, tour coaches, intercity bus lines — are subject to the full range of FMCSA passenger carrier regulations, including heightened driver qualification standards, drug and alcohol testing, vehicle inspection requirements, and a mandatory $5 million minimum liability insurance requirement for vehicles carrying 16 or more passengers. School buses operated by public school systems trigger Georgia sovereign immunity considerations. Crashes involving buses often result in mass casualty events with multiple injured victims.

$5M Minimum Insurance FMCSA Passenger Carrier Rules Mass Casualty Risk School Bus — Immunity Issues
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Tow Trucks
Including: flatbed wreckers, wheel-lift tow trucks, heavy-duty rotator wreckers

Tow trucks operate in dangerous conditions by definition — responding to crashes and breakdowns on active highways, often in low visibility and with limited traffic control. A tow truck driver securing a disabled vehicle on the shoulder of I-16 or I-95 faces significant risk from passing traffic, and the stopped or slowly moving tow truck creates a hazard for other drivers. When a tow truck itself is involved in a crash, liability analysis must account for whether the tow company followed proper procedures, whether roadway warning devices were properly deployed, and whether the vehicle being towed was properly secured. Tow truck companies operating in interstate commerce are subject to FMCSA regulations and commercial insurance requirements.

Highway Shoulder Operations Towed Vehicle Securement FMCSA Commercial Rules Warning Device Requirements

Federal Truck Weight & Classification Standards

The Federal Highway Administration classifies commercial vehicles by gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR). Classification affects which regulations apply, what CDL endorsements are required, and what insurance minimums are mandated. The following are the key thresholds that matter in Georgia truck accident litigation.

FHWA Class GVWR Range Typical Vehicle Type Key Legal Threshold
Class 3 10,001 – 14,000 lbs Cargo vans, large pickups, step vans CMV threshold — FMCSA rules may apply in interstate commerce
Classes 4–5 14,001 – 19,500 lbs Box trucks, delivery trucks, tow trucks Full CMV — driver records, HOS, drug testing required
Class 6 19,501 – 26,000 lbs Medium box trucks, large delivery trucks CDL required above 26,000 lbs; $750K min. insurance
Class 7 26,001 – 33,000 lbs City buses, garbage trucks, large dump trucks CDL required; full FMCSA driver qualification rules
Class 8 33,001 lbs and above Tractor-trailers, heavy dump trucks, cement mixers, tankers, log trucks Full CMV rules; max 80,000 lbs GVWR on public highways; $750K–$5M insurance

The Truck Type Determines Who Pays

Every vehicle type on this page carries a different insurance structure, a different regulatory framework, and a different set of potentially liable parties. Getting that analysis right — immediately — is what separates a full recovery from a denied claim. Call us today.

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Authoritative Sources

Trusted Resources for Truck Accident Victims

The following federal agencies, nonprofit organizations, and research institutions provide authoritative data on commercial truck safety, crash statistics, industry regulations, and highway safety. ConnerKutchey LLLP draws on these sources when investigating cases and building the evidentiary record to support our clients' claims.

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Note to Truck Accident Victims: These resources are provided for general educational purposes. If you or a family member has been injured in a crash involving a commercial truck or large vehicle, the data and publications found on these sites can help you understand your rights and the regulatory framework governing the trucking industry — but they are not a substitute for legal advice. Call ConnerKutchey LLLP at 877-283-2745 for a free, confidential case evaluation.

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Federal Agency
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
fmcsa.dot.gov

The FMCSA is the primary federal agency responsible for regulating and providing safety oversight of commercial motor vehicles in the United States. This website contains comprehensive information about commercial truck safety programs, trucking industry regulations, regulation enforcement, adjudication decisions, and civil penalties. The site also provides facts related to the prevention of commercial motor vehicle-related injuries and fatalities — including crash statistics, enforcement case databases, carrier safety records, and the SAFER System for looking up any carrier's safety history.

Carrier Safety Lookup Enforcement Database Hours of Service Rules ELD Requirements Civil Penalties
Visit fmcsa.dot.gov →
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Industry Association
American Trucking Associations
trucking.org

The American Trucking Associations is the largest and most comprehensive national trade association for the trucking industry, representing its members before Congress, the executive branch, and federal agencies. The ATA's website includes valuable industry research, best practices for commercial truck highway and driver safety, and reports on current trends in the trucking industry. For truck accident victims and their attorneys, the ATA's publications — including its annual American Trucking Trends report — provide important context about industry standards, fleet sizes, and commercial vehicle mileage data used in litigation.

Industry Safety Standards Annual Trends Reports Driver Safety Programs Regulatory Advocacy
Visit trucking.org →
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Independent Research Organization
Insurance Institute for Highway Safety / Highway Loss Data Institute
iihs.org

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) is an independent, nonprofit scientific and educational organization dedicated to reducing deaths, injuries, and property damage from motor vehicle crashes. Founded and supported by auto insurers, the IIHS conducts and funds research into crash causation, vehicle safety ratings, roadway design, and driver behavior. Its companion organization, the Highway Loss Data Institute (HLDI), analyzes insurance loss data to provide objective statistical information about the relative safety of different vehicles and driving behaviors. The IIHS publishes influential research on large truck safety, underride crashes, and collision avoidance technology.

Crash Research Vehicle Safety Ratings Underride Crash Studies Fatality Statistics Insurance Loss Data
Visit iihs.org →
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Federal Agency
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
nhtsa.gov

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is a federal agency within the U.S. Department of Transportation responsible for writing and enforcing federal motor vehicle safety standards and researching strategies to prevent deaths and injuries on the nation's roadways. The NHTSA website provides comprehensive crash statistics through its Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), detailed articles and research on traffic accidents and vehicle safety, vehicle recall databases, and enforcement actions against vehicle manufacturers. NHTSA data is frequently cited in truck accident litigation to establish baseline industry safety standards.

FARS Crash Data Fatality Statistics Vehicle Safety Standards Recall Database Distracted Driving Data
Visit nhtsa.gov →
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Nonprofit Safety Organization
National Safety Council — Driver Safety
nsc.org/road-safety

The National Safety Council (NSC) is a nonprofit, nongovernmental public service organization whose mission is to eliminate preventable deaths in the workplace, on roads, and in homes and communities. The NSC's Driver Safety resources feature articles on commercial trucking industry safety and training, distracted driving, impaired driving, car maintenance safety, airbag and seat belt safety, and more. The NSC publishes an annual Injury Facts report that includes comprehensive data on motor vehicle deaths and injuries — a key resource in quantifying the full scope of damages in serious truck accident cases.

Injury Facts Report Distracted Driving Driver Training Seatbelt & Airbag Safety Workplace Safety
Visit nsc.org/road-safety →
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FMCSA Safety Campaign
Share The Road Safely — The No-Zone
fmcsa.dot.gov/ourroads

The FMCSA's "Our Roads, Our Safety®" program — which includes the widely referenced "No-Zone" public education campaign — provides critical information about truck blind spots and blind spot accident prevention. The No-Zone concept identifies the four danger areas around commercial trucks where passenger vehicles are invisible to the driver: directly in front, directly behind, and along both sides of the vehicle. Understanding No-Zones is important in litigation involving side-swipe crashes, rear-end underride accidents, and right-turn squeeze collisions — cases where the carrier may attempt to shift blame to the other vehicle's driver.

Truck Blind Spots No-Zone Education Wide Turn Dangers Stopping Distance Data Underride Prevention
Visit fmcsa.dot.gov/ourroads →
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Federal Department
U.S. Department of Transportation
transportation.gov

The U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) is the federal cabinet department responsible for transportation policy, infrastructure, safety, and regulation in the United States. The DOT's website features a broad range of statistics, regulatory dockets, rules, and references regarding automobiles, commercial trucks, buses, and public transit. The DOT is the parent agency of the FMCSA, NHTSA, and other transportation safety agencies. Its website is a central hub for federal transportation rulemaking, enforcement actions, and policy guidance — including the final rules and federal register documents that govern the commercial trucking industry.

Federal Rulemaking Transportation Statistics Regulatory Dockets Safety Policy Emergency Declarations
Visit transportation.gov →
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Insurance Research Organization
Insurance Information Institute
iii.org

The Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I) is a nonprofit communications organization supported by the insurance industry whose mission is to improve public understanding of insurance. The Triple-I website provides consumer-facing and research-level information on vehicle safety, insurance coverage, liability, and more. For truck accident victims, the Triple-I is a valuable source for understanding commercial trucking insurance requirements, liability coverage structures, underinsured motorist protection, and the insurance landscape that governs how large carriers respond to injury claims. The Triple-I also publishes data on insurance claim frequencies and severities by vehicle type and coverage.

Commercial Auto Insurance Liability Coverage Claim Statistics UM/UIM Coverage Vehicle Safety Data
Visit iii.org →

State Resources for Georgia Truck Accident Victims

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State Agency
Georgia Dept. of Transportation

Georgia DOT oversees the state's highway system and publishes crash data, road condition reports, and construction zone information relevant to truck accident cases on Georgia's interstate and state road system.

Visit dot.ga.gov →
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State Bar Association
State Bar of Georgia

The State Bar of Georgia provides attorney verification, lawyer search tools, and consumer resources for Georgians seeking legal representation. Verify that your attorney is licensed and in good standing before retaining them.

Visit gabar.org →
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State Agency
Georgia State Patrol

The Georgia State Patrol investigates major crashes on Georgia highways, including fatal commercial vehicle crashes. Crash reports prepared by GSP troopers are a critical piece of evidence in truck accident litigation.

Visit gsp.georgia.gov →

Knowledge Is Power. An Experienced Attorney Is Even Better.

The resources above can help you understand your situation — but navigating a serious truck accident claim against a large carrier and its insurance company requires experienced legal counsel. ConnerKutchey LLLP offers free consultations with no obligation.

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Our Network of Legal Resources
All sites above are operated by ConnerKutchey LLLP · 877-283-2745 · Savannah & Jesup, Georgia. Attorney advertising.