Why Truck Accident Cases Are Different
A passenger car colliding with an 80,000-pound commercial truck is not a comparable event to a typical auto crash. Truck cases live in a different legal universe — governed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs), administered by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), and shaped by commercial insurance policies that dwarf personal auto coverage. The trucking company already has a rapid-response team trained to lock down their version of events within hours of a crash. You need someone in your corner who knows the federal rulebook just as well.
Maximum Truck Weight
Up to 20x the weight of a passenger vehicle — catastrophic injury patterns are the norm
Federal Minimum
Interstate carriers must carry $750K–$5M in liability coverage (49 CFR 387)
Possible Liable Parties
Driver, carrier, broker, shipper, loader, maintenance vendor, manufacturer
Federal Regulations That Govern Every Commercial Truck
When the rules below get broken and someone gets hurt, those violations become evidence of negligence. When the rules are followed but the crash still happens, the records of compliance often reveal the real cause. Either way, your case lives or dies on whether the right records get preserved and the right experts review them in time.
Hours of Service (HOS) Rules
Drivers are limited in daily and weekly drive time and must take mandatory off-duty rest. Fatigue is consistently one of the leading causes of catastrophic truck crashes. We pull driver logs and ELD data to find HOS violations.
Driver Qualification (DQ) Files
Carriers must verify CDLs, medical certifications, prior employment, motor vehicle records, and road tests. If the company hired or retained a driver they shouldn’t have, that’s negligent hiring or retention.
Drug and Alcohol Testing
Federal rules mandate pre-employment, random, post-accident, and reasonable-suspicion testing. Failure to test after a serious crash — or evidence of a positive test — becomes powerful evidence at trial.
Vehicle Inspection & Maintenance Records
Annual DOT inspections, pre- and post-trip driver inspections, brake services, tire condition, suspension, and lighting must be documented. Brake failures and tire blowouts are not “accidents” — they are predictable consequences of skipped maintenance.
Cargo Loading and Securement
Federal rules govern how cargo must be loaded, distributed, and secured. Improperly loaded freight is a major cause of jackknife, rollover, and loss-of-control crashes — and the loader is often a separate company from the carrier.
Antioch’s Highway 4 Freight Corridor
Antioch sits on one of Northern California’s busiest east-west freight arteries. Highway 4 connects the Central Valley — and the Port of Stockton — to the Bay Area. Big rigs, double trailers, gas haulers, paper-mill freight, utility trucks, and intermodal loads pass through Antioch every hour of the day. Add the I-680 connector through Concord, and the corridor becomes the meeting point for Bay Area and Central Valley freight.
These are the locations where commercial truck crashes consistently cluster:
Hwy 4 / Hillcrest Avenue Interchange
Heavy merge volume, exit-side rear-end crashes during commute hours. Truck braking distances from highway speed are many multiples of a passenger car — backups here produce catastrophic impacts.
Hwy 4 / Lone Tree Way Exits
High-volume retail and commuter feed where trucks slow rapidly into stop-and-go traffic. Last-second lane cuts and following-too-close patterns produce some of the worst crashes we see in eastern Contra Costa.
Hwy 4 / Somersville Road Interchange
Known for lane-change and merge collisions, particularly involving trucks crossing multiple lanes to make their exit. Blind-spot sideswipes are a recurring pattern.
Wilbur Avenue & Loveridge Road Industrial Corridor
Antioch’s northern industrial frontage — paper plants, gas/utility freight, river-adjacent facilities. Constant commercial truck flow on narrower streets produces right-turn squeeze and intersection T-bone patterns.
Hwy 4 to I-680 Split at Concord
Long stop-and-go segments where rear-end big-rig crashes do catastrophic damage to passenger vehicles in front of them. Tule fog and first-storm rain compound the risk seasonally.
Hillcrest Avenue Surface Street
Heavy commercial turn volume into and out of the freeway. Right-turn squeeze crashes, where trucks make wide turns from the wrong lane and trap passenger vehicles to the curb side, occur with predictable regularity.
Multi-Party Liability: Who You Can Hold Accountable
A truck crash almost never has a single defendant. Sorting out who is responsible — and which insurance policy responds — is a core part of what we do. More defendants generally means more available coverage, which is critical in catastrophic-injury cases.
The Driver
Almost always a defendant. Direct liability for unsafe operation: speeding, distraction, fatigue, impairment, or failing to maintain a safe following distance.
The Trucking Company (Motor Carrier)
Direct liability for negligent hiring, retention, training, supervision, maintenance, and dispatch decisions that pushed the driver into HOS violations — plus vicarious liability for the driver under respondeat superior.
The Cargo Loader / Shipper
A separate company is often responsible for loading and securing the freight. Improper loading shifts liability — and policy coverage — to the loader.
The Maintenance Contractor
Many carriers outsource maintenance to third-party shops. If a brake or tire failure caused the crash, the maintenance vendor may be a defendant with separate insurance.
The Manufacturer or Broker
Defective brakes, tires, steering, or trailers can put the manufacturer in the case under product liability. Freight brokers can be liable for negligently selecting an unsafe carrier with a poor safety record.
A Government Entity
If a dangerous road condition contributed — a poorly designed merge, missing signage, signal failure — a public entity may share fault. Government claims have a 6-month presentation deadline.
Critical Evidence in Truck Cases
This is the part that does not wait. Trucking companies are allowed to overwrite or destroy certain records on a regular cycle. Some of the most important evidence in your case has a shelf life measured in days or weeks unless a lawyer locks it down with a formal preservation (spoliation) letter.
ECM & Black Box Data
The truck’s Electronic Control Module records speed, throttle position, brake application, and engine events in the seconds before impact. ECM data is some of the most powerful evidence available — and it can be lost the moment the truck is repaired or returned to service.
ELD & Hours-of-Service Records
Electronic Logging Device data shows driver hours, location, hard braking, and engine events. Federal rules require retention for a finite period (generally six months for RODS), but carriers’ internal systems may overwrite event-level detail much sooner.
Dashcam & In-Cab Video
Many fleets run forward-facing and driver-facing cameras. Footage is often overwritten on a 30- to 90-day rolling cycle. We send preservation demands the day we’re retained.
Driver Logs & Dispatch Communications
Fuel receipts, bills of lading, dispatch records, toll records, text messages, in-cab communications, and satellite messaging. These often show whether dispatch pressured the driver into HOS violations.
Drug & Alcohol Testing Records
Federal rules require post-accident testing. The presence — or absence — of these records is itself meaningful evidence.
Maintenance & Inspection Records
Annual DOT inspections, daily driver inspections, brake service records, tire condition logs. Skipped maintenance is a recurring root cause we find when we get the records.
The single most important practical advice we can give you: do not wait. ECM data can disappear when the truck is repaired. Dashcam footage cycles out in 30–90 days. Dispatch notes and text messages get purged. The longer you go before a lawyer sends a formal spoliation letter to the carrier, broker, loader, and maintenance vendor, the more of the evidence on which your case depends will be gone for good. Call 1-800-707-0707 the day of the crash if at all possible.
What to Do After an Antioch Truck Accident
The first few hours after a commercial truck crash determine a lot. Trucking companies dispatch rapid-response teams to the scene to lock down their narrative — sometimes within minutes. Here’s exactly what to do:
Call 911 and Get to a Trauma Center
Truck-crash injuries are typically severe. John Muir Walnut Creek is the closest Level II trauma center to Antioch and the right destination for catastrophic injuries. Sutter Delta on Lone Tree Way handles lower-acuity care. Go even if you feel fine — adrenaline masks injuries, and a same-day medical record is critical evidence.
Get the DOT Number, MC Number, and Carrier Name
Photograph the truck and trailer from every angle, including the side panels. The DOT number, MC number, and carrier name are required by federal rules to be displayed. These identify the legally responsible motor carrier and let us run an FMCSA SAFER check on their safety record.
Lock Down Witnesses Fast
Truck-crash witnesses often include other commercial drivers — invaluable but hard to track down later. Get names and phone numbers before they leave. CHP Contra Costa Area handles Hwy 4 crashes; Antioch PD handles surface streets. Get the report number before you leave the scene.
Do NOT Talk to the Trucking Company’s Insurance
Carrier rapid-response teams arrive fast and will try to get a recorded statement from you while you’re still in shock. Do not give a statement. Do not sign anything. Do not accept any “quick check” for property damage. Tell them to call your lawyer.
Avoid Social Media About the Crash
Trucking insurance investigators monitor social profiles aggressively. A photo, a comment, a check-in — anything you post can and will be used to undercut your damages claim. Lock your accounts down and post nothing about the crash, your injuries, or the case.
Call Scranton Law — Today
1-800-707-0707, 24/7. The spoliation letter has to go out fast — that’s what preserves ECM data, dashcam footage, driver logs, and dispatch records before they cycle out. We pull the FMCSA SAFER report on the carrier, identify witnesses, and arrange lien-based medical care if you need it.
Critical Deadlines for Antioch Truck Accident Claims
Miss these and you may lose your right to recover entirely. Truck cases also have a separate, urgent timeline for evidence preservation that runs in days, not years:
Personal Injury Lawsuit
Statute of limitations from accident date (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1)
Government Claims
If Caltrans, City of Antioch, or Contra Costa County share fault (Gov. Code § 911.2)
ECM & Dashcam Data
Truck records may be overwritten before a spoliation letter goes out
What Compensation Is Available?
Truck cases involve catastrophic injury patterns more often than passenger-only crashes. Recoverable damages must account for the lifetime cost of those injuries — not just the bedside number an early adjuster might quote.
Past and Future Medical Expenses
Hospital, surgery, rehabilitation, prosthetics, attendant care, durable medical equipment, future surgeries, and life-care planning. Catastrophic-injury life-care plans frequently run into the millions.
Lost Wages and Earning Capacity
Income missed while recovering plus the long-term reduction in earning capacity if your injuries permanently affect your ability to work.
Pain and Suffering
Physical pain, emotional distress, anxiety, loss of enjoyment of life. In catastrophic-injury cases — TBI, paralysis, amputation — this category is typically the largest component of the recovery.
Disfigurement & Permanent Disability
Scarring, amputation, paralysis, and other permanent physical changes are independently compensable under California law.
Loss of Consortium & Wrongful Death
Spousal loss-of-consortium claims and wrongful death damages for surviving family members in fatal crashes — truck crashes account for a disproportionate share of fatal collisions on freight corridors.
Punitive Damages
Available where the carrier’s conduct was egregious — DUI, drug use, gross HOS violations, falsified logs, or willful regulatory misconduct. These go beyond compensating you and punish the carrier.
Three reasons. One: commercial truck injuries are typically more severe — an 80,000-pound vehicle produces catastrophic injury patterns that passenger-only crashes don’t. Two: available insurance is much higher — $750K to $5M in federal minimums versus California’s $30K auto minimum. Three: federal regulations create more avenues to prove fault, and documented violations support larger non-economic and punitive damages awards.
How Your Antioch Truck Accident Case Works
Free Consultation
You call us at 1-800-707-0707. We listen, answer your questions honestly, and tell you whether you have a case worth pursuing. No commitment. No fee.
Spoliation & Preservation
Within hours of being retained, we send formal preservation letters to the carrier, broker, loader, and maintenance vendor — demanding ELD data, dashcam, driver logs, dispatch, the DQ file, drug and alcohol testing, maintenance records, and the truck and trailer themselves.
Investigation
We pull the Antioch PD or CHP report, run the FMCSA SAFER report on the carrier, gather medical records, identify witnesses, secure surveillance footage, and reconstruct the crash with engineers when warranted.
Treatment Coordination
We make sure you’re getting the medical care you need — including specialists for TBI, spine, and orthopedic injuries — and we handle lien arrangements if you don’t have health insurance.
Demand & Negotiation
Once you’ve reached maximum medical improvement (or future care can be valued by a life-care planner), we send a comprehensive demand to every applicable insurance policy and negotiate hard.
Litigation If Needed
If the carrier and its insurer won’t pay what your case is worth, we file suit at the Wakefield Taylor Courthouse in Martinez. Willingness to try cases is what produces serious offers.
Antioch Hospitals, CHP & Court Resources
Local Hospitals & Trauma Centers
John Muir Health Walnut Creek (Level II Trauma) — 1601 Ygnacio Valley Road · (925) 939-3000
Closest Level II trauma center to Antioch — primary destination for catastrophic truck-crash injuries.
Sutter Delta Medical Center — 3901 Lone Tree Way, Antioch · (925) 779-7200 · 24/7 ER
Primary local hospital for non-Level-II crash care.
Kaiser Permanente Antioch — 4501 Sand Creek Road · (925) 813-6500 · 24/7 ER
Police Agencies, CHP & Courts
Antioch Police Department — 300 L Street · (925) 778-2441 · City streets and surface roads
CHP Contra Costa Area — 5001 Blum Road, Martinez · (925) 646-4980 · Hwy 4, I-680, SR-242
Wakefield Taylor Courthouse (PI filings) — 725 Court Street, Martinez, CA 94553
We pull crash reports for our clients as part of intake — you don’t have to deal with the bureaucracy yourself. How to get a CHP accident report →