The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsswift-marten-509

Brother in a bad semi accident, family has no idea where to start — please help

I'm writing this on behalf of my whole family because honestly none of us know what we're doing and my brother is still in the hospital so he can't advocate for himself right now.

Long story short — he was driving home from a night shift a few weeks ago when a fully loaded semi drifted into his lane on the interstate and basically ran him off the road. Airbags deployed, he rolled, the whole thing. He's got a broken collarbone, a pretty serious back injury, and some nerve stuff the doctors are still evaluating. They're saying he might be off work for months, and he works a physical job so this is going to hit him hard financially.

We've been fielding calls from an insurance adjuster already which honestly feels really fast and a little aggressive. Someone in our family wants to just settle quickly and "get it over with" but something in my gut says we shouldn't rush.

We've been told trucking accidents are a totally different beast than regular car accidents — something about federal regulations, the trucking company's own lawyers, black box data, etc. That's already over our heads.

My questions:

  • How do you even find a lawyer who actually knows trucking cases vs. one who just says they do?
  • What should we be documenting right now while everything is fresh?
  • Is there anything we should absolutely NOT do or say to the insurance company?

Any guidance from people who've been through something like this would mean a lot. We're exhausted and scared and just trying to protect him.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 11
    mellow-owl-032

    I went through something really similar with a family member a couple years ago — commercial truck, highway, the whole nightmare. The biggest thing I wish someone had told us earlier: do not let anyone in your family give a recorded statement to the trucking company's insurance. We almost did and our attorney later told us that could have seriously hurt the case. Just keep saying 'we're in the process of retaining counsel' until you have a lawyer.

  • 18
    kind-vole-487

    That adjuster calling fast? That's not them being helpful. That's them trying to get a low offer accepted before your brother knows how serious his injuries really are — especially with something like nerve damage, which can take months to fully understand. Don't sign anything, don't accept anything, and honestly don't even have long friendly conversations with them. They are not on your side.

  • 21
    patient-wolf-932

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be straight with you — when there's a commercial truck involved, the carrier has a whole team that activates immediately after a crash. Investigators, lawyers, the works. By the time your family is even figuring out what happened, they've already started building their file. That's not meant to scare you, just to explain why getting representation quickly actually matters in trucking cases specifically. The evidence window on things like black box data and driver logs can close fast.

  • 11
    spry-elk-008

    A few practical things worth doing right now while you sort out the lawyer question:

    • Keep every single document — ER paperwork, every follow-up appointment, every prescription, every bill
    • If your brother can tolerate it, have him (or someone close to him) start a simple journal of how he's feeling day to day, what he can't do, pain levels, sleep, etc. This kind of record is surprisingly useful later
    • Photograph everything if you haven't — his injuries, the vehicle damage, anything

    For finding a trucking-specific attorney, look for someone who mentions FMCSA regulations or hours-of-service violations in their background. That signals they actually know the federal trucking framework, not just general PI work.

    • 4
      careful-rider819

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 13
    quick-lynx-340

    Not legal advice, but — trucking cases really do operate differently than standard auto claims. There can be multiple liable parties (the driver, the carrier, a leasing company, a shipper), and evidence like the ECM data and driver logs has to be formally preserved quickly or it can disappear. Most attorneys who handle these cases work on contingency, so there's typically no upfront cost to at least have a consultation. I'd encourage your family to talk to at least two or three before committing to anyone.

    • 7
      calm-passenger602

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 18
    sharp-fox-039

    The nerve involvement your brother has — please make sure the family is pushing for specialist follow-up if the hospital hasn't already set it up. General docs sometimes underestimate how much nerve injuries evolve over weeks and months, and having thorough, consistent medical documentation from specialists matters both for his health and for any legal process. Don't let him minimize his symptoms to doctors either. Some people do that without realizing it.

  • 13
    hearty-kestrel-948

    I'm so sorry your family is going through this. The stress of someone you love being hurt AND trying to navigate all this legal/insurance stuff at the same time is just a lot. Please make sure someone is also checking in on you and the rest of the family, not just your brother. Caregiver burnout is real and you all deserve support too. 💙

    • 14
      kind-sparrow-991

      Stop talking to the adjuster. Full stop. You don't owe them anything right now. Find a lawyer who specifically lists truck accident or commercial vehicle cases on their website — not just 'car accidents.' Call two or three, most will do a free consult. Bring every document you have. Let the lawyer talk to insurance from that point on. That's the whole playbook right there.

  • 16
    quick-wren-366

    I don't want to be harsh but I do want to ask — do you know yet who's actually at fault? Like, has there been any official accident report or determination? I ask because the strategy and urgency changes a bit depending on whether liability is clear-cut or contested. If the semi's dashcam or witnesses clearly show the truck crossed the line, that's one situation. If it's murkier, that's another. Doesn't change the 'get a lawyer' advice but it's worth knowing where things stand.