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Atlanta Truck Accident Lawyer

Pursuing Full Accountability for Commercial Truck Crash Victims in Georgia

A collision with an 18-wheeler, a semi-truck, or any large commercial vehicle is not the same as a car accident. The physics alone — an 80,000-pound truck striking a passenger vehicle — produce a different category of injury. The legal landscape is just as different: federal regulations, multiple potentially liable parties, and insurance policies that can reach into the millions. At Lonnie Law LLC, we understand the weight of what you are facing right now. We are here to listen, help you understand your legal options, and work to pursue the full and fair compensation you may be entitled to under Georgia law and applicable federal regulations.

Why Atlanta Truck Accident Cases Demand Immediate Action

Atlanta sits at the intersection of four major interstate freight corridors — I-285, I-75, I-85, and I-20 — making it one of the highest-volume commercial trucking hubs in the southeastern United States. The Port of Savannah, the largest container port on the East Coast, feeds an almost continuous stream of commercial freight up I-16 and I-75 directly into the Atlanta metro. Add the distribution networks of UPS (whose global headquarters is in Atlanta), FedEx, and Amazon Logistics — operating out of multiple Fulton County fulfillment centers — and the result is a daily environment where passenger vehicles and 80,000-pound trucks share the same lanes on I-285, the I-75/I-85 Downtown Connector, and Fulton Industrial Boulevard.

When those trucks are involved in crashes, the consequences are catastrophic. But so is what happens next. While you are still processing the trauma of the accident, the trucking company’s insurer has already dispatched an accident reconstruction team to the scene. Their job is to protect the carrier — not you. Evidence from the truck’s electronic logging device (ELD), the onboard black box, and driver logs can be altered, overwritten, or legally destroyed if preservation demands are not sent immediately. This is not a situation where waiting to “see how things go” serves your interests.

Lonnie Law LLC focuses on personal injury matters, including commercial truck accident claims throughout the Atlanta area. We understand the federal regulatory framework that governs these cases, and we work to level the playing field against carriers who have far more resources than the people they injure. Atlanta car accident cases share some legal concepts with truck claims — if the crash involved both passenger vehicles and commercial trucks, our work on Atlanta car accident cases informs how we approach the overlap — but truck cases carry distinct federal dimensions that require specific attention.

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Atlanta Truck Accident Lawyer

  • I-285 / I-20 Interchange (South Atlanta) Atlanta’s highest-volume commercial freight bottleneck — where I-285 (the Perimeter) crosses I-20, funneling cargo from the Port of Savannah and Fulton Industrial Boulevard through a single interchange that ranks among Georgia’s most frequent large-truck crash zones.
  • I-75 / I-85 Downtown Connector The most congested stretch of highway in the southeastern United States — an eight-lane corridor through downtown Atlanta where commercial trucks, commuter traffic, and construction zones create daily high-speed collision risks for all road users.
  • Tom Moreland Interchange (Spaghetti Junction) The I-285 / I-85 interchange in northeast Atlanta — one of the most complex highway interchanges in the country, where trucks navigating multiple stacked ramps at speed create significant blind-spot and rollover crash risks.
  • Fulton Industrial Boulevard Atlanta’s primary industrial and distribution corridor — a surface road running parallel to I-20 West, lined with warehouses, freight terminals, and distribution centers that generate heavy commercial truck traffic at all hours.
  • I-75 South (Lakewood Freeway Corridor) The primary route connecting Amazon and FedEx fulfillment centers south of Atlanta to the broader metro — a corridor where delivery trucks, semi-trucks, and passenger vehicles compete for limited lane space through high-density commercial zones.
  • Hartsfield-Jackson Airport Cargo Corridors The world’s busiest airport generates a constant flow of cargo trucks on I-285 South and I-75 South — vehicles moving air freight between the cargo facility, regional distribution hubs, and interstate connections around the clock.
  • I-285 / I-85 Northeast Interchange A high-speed interchange near Doraville serving truck traffic to and from the northeast freight corridors — documented as one of the metro’s recurring commercial vehicle crash locations due to tight ramp geometry and high approach speeds.
  • Industrial Boulevard NW A northwest Atlanta surface corridor linking multiple freight terminals and manufacturing facilities to I-285 — a road where commercial truck traffic shares lanes with pedestrians and cyclists in a mixed-use industrial environment.
  • I-20 East / West Corridor Running through the heart of Atlanta, I-20 carries substantial commercial freight load connecting Fulton and DeKalb counties — a corridor where truck accidents frequently involve passenger vehicles attempting to navigate around slower-moving commercial traffic.
  • Grady Memorial Hospital Level I Trauma Center The primary destination for the most severely injured truck accident victims across the Atlanta metro — a Level I Trauma Center equipped to handle the catastrophic injury patterns, including crush injuries and traumatic brain injuries, that commercial truck crashes produce.

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How Commercial Truck Crashes Happen on Atlanta's Roads

Most commercial truck crashes are not true accidents. They are the foreseeable result of a driver, a carrier, or a maintenance provider failing to meet the standards federal and Georgia law require. The FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) exists precisely because the consequences of trucking negligence are so severe. Some of the most common failure points that lead to Atlanta truck accidents include:

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The Catastrophic Injuries Commercial Truck Crashes Produce

When an 80,000-pound commercial truck strikes a passenger vehicle, the disparity in mass and energy produces injuries that are frequently more severe — and more permanent — than those in car-to-car collisions. We have experience representing clients who have suffered a wide range of serious injuries in truck accidents, including:

  • Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI): From concussion to severe closed-head injury — including diffuse axonal injury from sudden deceleration forces unique to high-mass collisions.
  • Spinal Cord Injuries: Including complete and incomplete injuries with potential for permanent paralysis — frequently requiring lifetime medical management and adaptive care needs that must be fully accounted for in any claim.
  • Crush Injuries & Multiple Fractures: The underride crash mechanism — where a passenger vehicle slides beneath a trailer — produces crush injuries to the upper body, face, and skull that are among the most severe in any vehicle accident category.
  • Internal Organ Damage & Abdominal Trauma: Blunt-force impact from an 18-wheeler at highway speed can rupture organs and cause internal bleeding that may not be immediately apparent at the scene — one reason immediate medical evaluation after a truck crash matters significantly.
  • Burn Injuries: Truck crashes involving fuel tank rupture or cargo fire can produce thermal injuries that require specialized long-term treatment — a category of harm with significant economic and non-economic damage implications.
  • Neck, Back & Soft Tissue Injuries: Even at lower impact speeds, the mass differential between a commercial truck and a passenger vehicle produces whiplash, herniated discs, and chronic pain conditions that can permanently affect a victim’s ability to work and function.

Who Is Liable After an Atlanta Commercial Truck Accident?

One of the defining differences between a truck accident claim and a standard car accident case is the number of parties who may bear legal responsibility. Under Georgia law, including O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 (Georgia’s modified comparative negligence statute), liability can be apportioned across multiple parties — and identifying all of them is critical to pursuing full compensation.

Potentially liable parties in an Atlanta truck accident include:

  • The truck driver — for negligent operation, hours-of-service violations, impaired driving, or distracted driving.
  • The motor carrier (trucking company) — for negligent hiring, inadequate training, pressure to violate hours-of-service limits, or failure to maintain vehicles under 49 CFR Part 396.
  • The freight broker — when a broker knowingly places cargo with a carrier that lacks adequate safety ratings or insurance.
  • The shipper or cargo loader — when improperly secured or overweight cargo contributed to the crash.
  • The vehicle or parts manufacturer — when a defective component (brakes, tires, coupling systems) caused or worsened the collision.
  • A maintenance provider — when a third-party shop performed inadequate or negligent repairs on the vehicle.

Georgia’s modified comparative negligence rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 means that a victim’s recovery may be reduced in proportion to any share of fault attributed to them — and barred entirely if that share reaches 50% or more. Insurance carriers and defense attorneys for large trucking companies typically work to shift as much fault as possible onto the victim. Understanding who the full range of liable parties may be — and building the evidence to support that analysis — is central to how these claims are approached.

Why Client Choose Us

The Lonnie Law LLC Difference: Direct Attorney Access in Complex Truck Cases

Clients Priority

Clients Priority

Our perfect 5.0 Google rating with over 66 client reviews is a testament to our commitment to our clients. We are proud of the trust we have earned and the results we have achieved.

No Win, No Fee

No Win, No Fee

Lonnie Law LLC operates on a contingency fee basis, meaning clients pay no upfront costs. A fee is only collected if compensation is successfully secured on the client's behalf, ensuring that quality legal representation is accessible to everyone.

Local Atlanta Lawyers

Local Atlanta Lawyers

Our firm is based right here in Brookhaven, and we have a deep understanding of Georgia’s laws and court systems. We are your neighbors, and we are here to fight for you.

Thousands in Cases Won

Thousands in Cases Won

We have a thorough understanding of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) regulations that govern the trucking industry. This specialized knowledge is critical in building a strong truck accident case.

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Compensation You May Be Able to Pursue After an Atlanta Truck Accident

Commercial truck accidents frequently involve damages that far exceed what a typical car accident claim produces — reflecting the severity of the injuries, the extended recovery timelines, and the lifetime care needs that catastrophic crashes can create. Georgia law provides multiple categories of compensable harm that may be relevant to a truck accident claim:

Economic Damages: Tangible financial losses including past and future medical expenses (emergency care, surgery, rehabilitation, assistive devices, ongoing treatment), lost wages and diminished earning capacity, vehicle repair or replacement, and the cost of in-home care or modifications required by your injuries.

Non-Economic Damages: Intangible losses including pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, permanent disfigurement, and the impact of your injuries on your relationships and daily functioning.

Punitive Damages: In cases involving willful or wanton conduct — such as a carrier that knowingly allowed a driver to operate with falsified ELD records or knowingly deferred critical brake maintenance — Georgia law may permit punitive damages under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1. These are not available in every case and depend on the specific facts and conduct involved.

Past results disclaimer: Any case examples or counts referenced on this page reflect Lonnie Law LLC’s general experience handling personal injury matters in the Atlanta area. Past results do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome in any future case. Every case is evaluated on its individual facts and circumstances.

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Our Process

Critical Evidence in an Atlanta Truck Accident Case

POLICE REPORT ICON

Prioritize Safety and Call 911

Every commercial truck manufactured after December 2017 is required by FMCSA mandate to be equipped with an Electronic Logging Device (ELD) — a system that records the driver’s hours of service in real time and cannot be as easily falsified as paper logbooks. In the event of a crash, ELD data can show exactly how many consecutive hours the driver had been operating, whether mandatory rest requirements under 49 CFR Part 395 were violated, and whether any data manipulation occurred before or after the accident. This data has a limited preservation window — carriers are not required to keep ELD records indefinitely, and some systems overwrite data on a rolling cycle. A legal hold demand sent to the carrier at the earliest opportunity is how that window is protected.

MEDICAL ATTENTION ICON

The Importance of Medical Evaluation

Commercial trucks are equipped with an Event Data Recorder (EDR) — commonly called the “black box” — that captures pre-crash data including vehicle speed, brake application, throttle position, and seatbelt status in the seconds immediately before impact. This data is among the most objective evidence available in a truck accident case. Like ELD data, EDR records are subject to overwriting and physical destruction if the vehicle is returned to service or repaired before a preservation hold is in place. Post-crash, many carriers move damaged vehicles quickly. The EDR in those vehicles goes with them — and the data window closes.

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Document the Scene Thoroughly

Before the ELD mandate took full effect, paper driver logs were a primary record of hours-of-service compliance — and a common target for falsification. Under 49 CFR Part 395, carriers are required to retain driver records of duty status for at least six months. In cases where paper logs exist alongside electronic records, discrepancies between the two can serve as evidence of intentional falsification. Driver logs also reflect route assignments, dispatch instructions, and scheduling patterns that can reveal whether a carrier’s operational model systematically pressured drivers to exceed legal limits.

INSURANCE COMPANY ICON

Limit All Communication with Insurers

Under 49 CFR Part 396, motor carriers must maintain systematic vehicle inspection, maintenance, and repair records — and drivers must complete pre-trip and post-trip inspection reports for every operating day. When a truck’s brakes, tires, steering, or coupling systems fail, those maintenance records can reveal whether the carrier knew about an existing defect and chose not to address it. Maintenance records are also subject to a legal retention minimum, and preservation demands must reach the carrier before those records are purged on the carrier’s standard cycle.

CALL YOUR LOCAL ATTORNEY ICON 1

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Dashcam footage from the truck itself, from nearby commercial properties, from GDOT traffic monitoring cameras along I-285 and I-75, and from other vehicles at the scene can capture the crash from multiple angles. Witness statements collected at the scene — before memories fade and before witnesses are approached by the carrier’s own investigators — can corroborate or contradict the truck driver’s account. Georgia State Patrol’s Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Division generates an accident report with findings that also becomes part of the evidentiary record.

GATHER EVIDENCE ICON

Keep a Detailed Journal and Records

The FMCSA maintains publicly accessible records on every registered motor carrier operating in interstate commerce — including safety ratings, out-of-service violation histories, crash records, and inspection results. A carrier with a pattern of hours-of-service violations, overweight loads, or brake defects prior to your accident may have known their operations posed an elevated risk. The FMCSA’s Safety Measurement System (SMS) and the carrier’s Motor Carrier Safety Fitness Determination are records that can be relevant to both the liability analysis and any argument for punitive damages in cases involving willful disregard for safety standards. A carrier’s FMCSA history is public information available at FMCSA.dot.gov.

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If you or a loved one has been affected by a commercial truck accident in Atlanta, understanding the full scope of your legal options is the first step. Contact Lonnie Law LLC today for a confidential consultation. Lonnie Law LLC is part of the Atlanta personal injury practice serving injury victims across the metro — handling cases with the direct attorney attention that large firms often cannot provide. Licensed by the State Bar of Georgia. The information on this website does not create an attorney-client relationship. Contacting Lonnie Law LLC or submitting a form does not establish representation. No attorney-client relationship is formed until a written agreement is signed by both you and Lonnie Law LLC.