Semi-Truck & Big Rig Accidents Attorney in Wasco, California
Accidentes de Camiones y Tráileres en Wasco — Abogados de Accidentes de California
Experienced semi-truck & big rig accidents representation for Wasco and Kern County
Accidentes de Camiones y Tráileres en Wasco — Abogados de Accidentes de California
Experienced semi-truck & big rig accidents representation for Wasco and Kern County
Free Consultation: Call 661-383-9387 today. No fee unless we win. Hablamos Español: 661-669-7362
Semi-truck and big rig accidents are among the most devastating collisions on California roads. A fully loaded commercial truck can weigh up to 80,000 pounds, making the impact with a passenger vehicle catastrophic. Victims often suffer traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, crushed limbs, severe burns, and wrongful death.
In Wasco, an agricultural community in northwestern Kern County, semi-truck & big rig accidents are a constant reality. With a population of approximately 28,000 and traffic on Highway 46, Highway 43, conditions are ripe for serious accidents that can change lives forever.
At Car Accident Lawyers of California, Attorney Paula J. Khehra, Esq. has over 10 years of experience handling semi-truck & big rig accidents cases in Wasco and throughout Kern County. Our firm has recovered over $100 million for accident victims. With a perfect 10.0 Avvo rating and recognized as a Super Lawyers Rising Star for 10 consecutive years (2017–2026), your case is in the best hands.
In addition to truck accidents, our attorneys handle car accidents, freeway accidents, motorcycle accidents, tow truck accidents, and pedestrian accidents cases in Wasco.
Our attorneys know the roads, intersections, and traffic patterns in Wasco. We know which stretches of Highway 46, Highway 43 are most dangerous, we're familiar with the downtown Wasco area, the rose processing facilities, and the Highway 46 and Highway 43 corridors, and we understand the local factors that contribute to accidents. We also know the Kern County Superior Court and local legal procedures that give your case a strategic advantage that out-of-area firms cannot match.
Wasco's location at the crossroads of Highway 46 and Highway 43 makes it a corridor for agricultural trucking. Highway 46, known as one of the most dangerous roads in California, carries heavy produce haulers and tanker trucks. The intersection of these two highways sees regular collisions involving commercial vehicles making turning movements. Agricultural processing facilities in and around Wasco generate additional heavy truck traffic on local roads.
The highest-risk zones for truck accidents in and around Wasco include Highway 46 between Wasco and I-5 carrying enormous volumes of agricultural and oil industry trucks on a two-lane road with a history of fatal crashes, Highway 43 connecting Wasco with packing houses and agricultural distribution centers in southern Kern County, the loading zones at rose and almond packing houses along Poso Drive and Jackson Avenue, Kimberlina Road between Wasco and carbon storage facilities where industrial trucks share the road with local traffic, and the BNSF railroad crossings at 7th Street and F Street where heavy trucks must stop and start on tracks with frequent train traffic. Wasco is known as the 'Rose City' and refrigerated truck traffic from flower packing houses is constant.
Understanding the California laws that apply to your semi-truck & big rig accidents case is crucial to maximizing your compensation:
FMCSA 49 CFR §395 — Federal Hours of Service regulations limit truck drivers to 11 hours of driving after 10 consecutive hours off duty. Violations are strong evidence of negligence.
CVC §22406 — Commercial trucks are limited to 55 mph on California highways, even when the posted limit is higher for passenger vehicles.
CVC §34500-34520 — California's commercial vehicle safety regulations require regular inspections, proper maintenance, and compliance with weight limits.
FMCSA 49 CFR §392.80-82 — Federal law prohibits texting and use of hand-held mobile phones by commercial vehicle drivers.
CVC §35550-35558 — Weight limits for commercial vehicles. Overloaded trucks have longer stopping distances and are more likely to roll over.
Victims of semi-truck & big rig accidents in Wasco frequently suffer serious injuries requiring extensive medical treatment. Common injuries include: Catastrophic spinal cord injuries and paralysis, traumatic brain injuries, crush injuries and amputations, severe burns from fuel fires, multiple fractures, internal organ damage, wrongful death, disfigurement, and post-traumatic stress disorder.
Seek medical attention immediately — visit nearest emergency care at Delano Regional Medical Center (15 minutes north) right away, even if injuries seem minor. Delayed symptoms are common, especially traumatic brain injuries and soft tissue injuries that may not manifest until hours or days after the accident.
Document everything — photograph the scene, your injuries, road conditions, traffic signs, and any hazardous conditions. Get names and phone numbers from all witnesses.
Report the incident — call 911 to create an official record. A police report is crucial evidence for your claim.
Do not give recorded statements to insurance adjusters without first consulting an attorney. Insurance companies use your own words against you to minimize your compensation.
Contact Car Accident Lawyers of California at 661-383-9387 for a free consultation. We serve Wasco and all surrounding communities. Hablamos Español: 661-669-7362.
Preserve the truck's evidence immediately — time is your enemy. The truck's Electronic Logging Device (ELD) data can be overwritten within days. Under federal FMCSA regulations (49 CFR §395), the driver's Hours of Service (HOS) records are mandatory, but trucking companies are not required to preserve them indefinitely after an accident. Your attorney must send an evidence preservation letter (spoliation letter) to the trucking company within the first 24 hours demanding they preserve: the driver's ELD data and HOS records, the truck's black box data (ECM/EDR) which records speed, braking, RPM, and seatbelt use in the moments before impact, cargo manifests and weight records, vehicle maintenance and inspection records, and post-accident drug and alcohol test results required by the FMCSA. Without this letter, the company may legally destroy this critical evidence. Call Car Accident Lawyers of California at 661-383-9387 immediately — every hour matters for preserving this evidence. Hablamos Español: 661-669-7362.
Semi-truck and big rig accidents produce catastrophic injuries and a significantly more complex compensation structure than passenger vehicle crashes. Under federal and California law, victims in Wasco can pursue substantial compensation from multiple sources.
Multiple liable parties — Unlike a typical car crash, a truck accident may involve liability from the driver, the trucking company (under the doctrine of respondeat superior), the freight broker who hired the carrier, the shipper who loaded the cargo, and the manufacturer of the truck or its components. Federal regulation (49 CFR §387) requires commercial trucks to maintain minimum insurance policies of $750,000 to $5 million depending on cargo — and HAZMAT carriers must carry up to $5 million in coverage. This means significantly more money is available to compensate your injuries than in a typical car case.
Catastrophic medical expenses — spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, amputations, severe burns, and crush injuries. Treatment may include multiple surgeries, long-term rehabilitation, lifetime medical care, mobility equipment, and home modifications. A forensic economist can calculate the total cost of your future medical needs to present to the jury.
Regulatory evidence as the basis for negligence — Commercial trucks are regulated by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Hours of Service violations (49 CFR §395), falsified electronic logging device (ELD) records, driver violation history, poor vehicle maintenance, and truck overloading can be used as direct evidence of negligence. Our attorney knows how to obtain and preserve these records before they are destroyed.
Lost wages and future earning capacity — including vocational economist testimony for career-ending injuries. Pain and suffering — uncapped under California law in personal injury cases, and the jury may consider the lasting psychological trauma of a truck accident. Punitive damages — available when the trucking company knowingly ignored safety regulations, allowed a fatigued or unqualified driver to operate the vehicle, or destroyed evidence after the accident.
Yes, and it is generally the best strategy. Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, the trucking company is legally liable for the negligent actions of its employed drivers. The company may also be directly liable for negligent hiring, inadequate supervision, pressuring drivers to violate hours-of-service rules, or poor vehicle maintenance. Trucking companies carry much higher insurance policies than individual drivers.
Yes. Commercial trucks weighing over 10,001 pounds are regulated by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). These regulations limit driving to 11 hours per duty period, require pre-trip inspections, mandate electronic logging devices (ELDs), and set CDL licensing standards. Violation of these federal regulations is powerful evidence of negligence in your case.
The loading company, shipper, and driver may all be liable. Federal regulations (49 CFR Part 393) set specific requirements for securing cargo based on type and weight. When cargo shifts, falls off the truck, or causes an imbalance leading to a rollover, multiple parties in the loading chain can be sued. Our attorneys will investigate cargo manifests and securement procedures to identify all responsible parties.
Multiple parties may be liable: the truck driver (for negligence, fatigue, or intoxication), the trucking company (under respondeat superior and for negligent hiring/supervision), the truck owner (if different from the driver), cargo loading companies (for improperly secured loads), and vehicle/parts manufacturers (for defective equipment). Our attorney will investigate all potential defendants to maximize your recovery.
Critical evidence includes the truck driver's electronic logging device (ELD) records, the driver's employment and training records, the truck's maintenance logs, black box data (ECM/EDR), cargo manifests, drug and alcohol test results, and dashcam or surveillance footage. Much of this evidence is controlled by the trucking company and can be destroyed. Our firm sends immediate preservation letters to prevent evidence destruction.
Generally yes, because truck accidents tend to cause more severe injuries due to the massive size differential between commercial trucks (up to 80,000 lbs) and passenger vehicles (3,000-4,000 lbs). Additionally, trucking companies carry much higher insurance policies — typically $1 million or more — providing a larger pool of compensation. Federal regulation violations also strengthen negligence claims.
Most commercial trucks have an Electronic Control Module (ECM) or Event Data Recorder (EDR) — similar to an airplane's black box — that records data including speed, braking, engine RPM, and whether the driver was wearing a seatbelt. This data is critical evidence. However, it can be overwritten or destroyed, so it is essential to have your attorney send a spoliation letter to the trucking company immediately after the accident.