Kenneth J. Allen & Associates - Injury Attorneys

Illinois and Indiana Personal Injury Lawyers and Attorneys Trial and Civil Litigation Law Firm.

Passion. Commitment. Excellence.

Those three words best describe the driving forces behind Kenneth J. Allen & Associates. Our firm is devoted exclusively to the practice of Accident and Injury Law, and exclusively to the people - not corporations - seriously hurt or killed in incidents as varied as on-the-job accidents, semi-truck crashes, injuries from a defective product, or loss of life because of a doctor's medical malpractice.

As the only multi-state law firm in Valparaiso Indiana, Merrillville Indiana, Indianapolis Indiana, Northwest Indiana, Chicagoland, Joliet Illinois, Tinley Park Illinois, Chicago Illinois accepting serious injury and wrongful death cases, exclusively, Kenneth J. Allen & Associates is experienced and knowledgeable in the details and procedures that can make or break a case.

phone (219)465-6292 fax (219)477-5181
1109 Glendale Boulevard Valparaiso, IN 46383

Monday-Friday: 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Saturday-Sunday: closed

Contact_button_single
Website_button_single
Map_button_single
Kenneth J. Allen & Associates - Injury Attorneys   >  "TRUCKERS: DANGERS ON THE JOB – DRIVING A BIG RIG SEMI TRUCK BRINGS ALL KINDS OF RISKS, JUST CONSIDER THIS WEEK’S NEWS STORIES"

TRUCKERS: DANGERS ON THE JOB – DRIVING A BIG RIG SEMI TRUCK BRINGS ALL KINDS OF RISKS, JUST CONSIDER THIS WEEK’S NEWS STORIES

posted by kjalaw on Jun 15th, 2012 at 6:44 am

Those big rig semi trucks that fill our roadways here in Indiana and Illinois, particularly, are known to be dangerous for others on the road.  The 18 wheelers are heavy, especially when they are hauling a full cargo load, and other vehicles on the road — sedans, SUVs, motorcycles, other trucks, vans — are wise to respect the power of these monsters.  Blog posts here have covered numerous events involving deaths and serious injuries happening to all sorts of people who have had accidents involving semi trucks. Big rig 18 wheeler crashes often mean fatalities will happen.

The Dangers of Driving Big Rigs: It’s More Than Accidents and Wrecks

However, there is more to consider about these big rig semi trucks.  Those truck drivers work long, hard hours to bring home the bacon to their families, and it’s often a thankless and lonely work: did you hear about the story of the truck driver’s dog who waited for his owner to return and get him at the truck stop … for two days?  It’s a tossup who was happier: that trucker or that pup.

Just this week in the national news there are stories that give great examples of how dangerous driving a semi truck on American roads can be these days.  Consider these:

  1. In California, Alexander Bell was killed last month when he tried to stop a thief who was stealing gas out of his semi big rig truck’s gas tank.  There was a scuffle, the evildoer took off driving a nearby semi truck with its driver, Mr. Bell, hanging on … sadly, the driver fell and his truck, driven by the thief, ran him over.  A tribute web site has been set up to help his family with financial needs.  Reportedly, the Stockton Police Department is pursuing this tragedy as a homicide.
  2. In Florida, Angel Aleman was driving his tractor trailer big rig along a highway near Jacksonville, Interstate 95, in the early hours of the morning (3:40 am) when a hammer crashed through his windshield. He was not hurt.  The Florida Highway Patrol was on the scene, and a man has been arrested and at last report, was being held in the Duval County Jail.  No one knows why he decided to risk the trucker’s live and others on the road by throwing the hammer at the moving big rig.
  3. In Virginia, a truck driver died in a crash that was caused by a tire going through the windshield of his tractor trailer truck as he was driving along Interstate 81.  This happened a little after eight in the morning this past Monday.  The trucker, Laurence Mitchell Dean,  lost control of the big rig as the tire slammed into the windshield and the moving truck crashed into the highway guard rail.  The truck driver was killed, pronounced dead at the scene of the accident. The tire, and its wheel, had come off a horse trailer attached to a pickup truck moving in the opposite direction.  The horse trailer/pickup truck driver has been charged with operating defective equipment.
  4. In the New England Journal of Medicine this month, an article appears with a shocking photograph of the effects of UV rays to a truck driver’s face after a career of driving trucks for over 28 years.  The sun exposure from the big rig cab’s window on the left side of the trucker’s face causes significant damage to the skin and increases the risk of cancer and melanoma.

 


  required For security purposes, your email is required but will not be displayed or shared.
 optional
 optional
Please type the two words shown here in the box below:
.
.
send to mobile
share bizblog
bookmark

blog history

May

feeds