Working as a trucking accident attorney Fresno has taken me into situations most people never imagine. These cases are more complex than typical collisions, not just because the injuries tend to be severe, but because there’s almost always a deeper story behind the crash—one involving overlooked maintenance, pressure from dispatchers, or long-standing problems hidden in logbooks and inspection reports.
One of my earliest trucking cases involved a commuter hit by a semi on Highway 99 during rush hour. The police report suggested the truck “lost control,” which is often treated as a vague catch-all explanation. When I reviewed the driver’s electronic log, I noticed he had been on the road far longer than the hours-of-service rules allowed. Fatigue had set in, and he drifted across lanes before overcorrecting. That discovery shifted the entire case. The trucking company initially tried to pin blame on traffic conditions, but the real cause was a driver pushed past the point of safe judgment. That case taught me to question every assumption written into initial reports.
Another situation that shaped how I practice involved a jackknife crash near Manning Avenue. The trucking company blamed sudden weather changes, insisting the road was too slick for any driver to maintain control. When I brought in an independent expert to inspect the truck, he noticed uneven wear on the brake components—wear that would have made the trailer far more prone to swinging under stress. The maintenance records had been filled out, but several inspections were clearly rushed or incomplete. The moment we connected that pattern of hurried maintenance to the crash, the company’s explanation fell apart. That experience made me much more aggressive about demanding full maintenance histories early in a case.
I’ve also handled cases where loading procedures were the real culprit. A client was injured when a trailer tipped during a left turn. The driver insisted he followed his training and took the turn carefully. When we examined photographs of the cargo taken shortly after the crash, it was obvious the load had been stacked too high on one side. The imbalance acted like a lever arm, pulling the trailer off-center even at a slow speed. Later interviews revealed the warehouse crew had been short-staffed and rushed the loading process. I still think about that case whenever someone claims a truck “just flipped”—trucks don’t behave unpredictably unless someone mishandled weight distribution along the way.
Fresno’s blend of agricultural traffic and interstate freight also creates unique challenges. I once represented a man struck when a produce hauler veered into his lane outside the city. The driver was new to the route and unfamiliar with how the truck handled when fully loaded. His training records showed he had completed only the minimum required instruction. When we dug deeper, we discovered the company relied heavily on seasonal drivers and often skipped refresher training during peak harvest months. That case underscored how uneven training practices can be, especially among smaller carriers working under tight deadlines.
Another pattern I’ve seen repeatedly is insurers leaning on property damage photos to argue that injuries “should not be severe.” I represented a woman whose SUV was rear-ended by a large delivery truck. The impact crumpled only part of her bumper, leading the insurer to imply the crash was minor. But crash reconstruction showed the truck’s speed and weight transferred far more force into her vehicle than the photos suggested. She suffered a cervical injury that worsened over time. That case taught me not to let visual impressions shape the argument—physics matters, not appearances.
Timing is another factor that complicates trucking cases. Evidence disappears quickly. Black box data gets overwritten. Damaged parts are repaired or replaced. One case involved a suspected tire failure, but by the time I requested the tire for inspection, it had already been discarded. Now, when a trucking case comes in, my first instinct is to send preservation letters immediately, sometimes before I’ve even met the client in person.
After years of doing this work, I’ve come to see trucking accidents not as isolated events but as the final link in a chain of small choices—some careless, some rushed, some born out of pressure to meet deadlines. My job is to uncover the decisions made long before the crash, the ones hidden behind maintenance logs, dispatch schedules, or training files.
The more experience I gain, the clearer it becomes that truck accidents are rarely “accidents” in the traditional sense. They’re preventable failures rooted in human decisions, and holding companies accountable starts with understanding exactly where those decisions went wrong.