Big-rig cases involve federal safety rules, electronic logs, and multiple liable parties.
Federal Rules Govern Big Rigs
Commercial trucks are regulated by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which sets standards for driver hours, vehicle maintenance, weight, and inspections.
Violations of these rules often help establish fault in a truck crash.
Hours-of-Service and Driver Fatigue
Federal hours-of-service rules limit how long truckers can drive without rest. Fatigue is a leading cause of serious truck crashes, and log violations can prove a driver was overworked.
Electronic logs make it harder to hide hours, but the records must be obtained quickly.
Electronic Logging Devices and Black Boxes
Modern trucks record speed, braking, and hours through electronic logging devices and event-data recorders. This data can reveal exactly what happened in the seconds before a crash.
Preserving it before it is overwritten is one of the most important early steps.
Multiple Liable Parties
In a truck crash, the driver, the trucking company, the cargo loader, the maintenance provider, and even the manufacturer may share responsibility.
Identifying every liable party expands the available insurance and the path to full recovery.
Why Evidence Disappears Fast
Trucking companies have rapid-response teams that reach crash scenes quickly. Logs, data, and physical evidence can be lost or altered if not preserved immediately.
Sending preservation letters early protects the evidence your case depends on.
Building a Truck-Crash Case
Strong truck cases combine the police report, electronic data, maintenance records, driver logs, and reconstruction. The complexity is why these claims demand prompt action.
A free case review can explain how to protect a truck-crash claim.
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Laws change and every case is different. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed California attorney.