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

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NEW 2011 TRUCK FUEL ECONOMY STANDARDS ANNOUNCEMENT BY PRESIDENT OBAMA CANCELLED FOR TRIP TO HONOR THOSE KILLED IN AFGHANISTAN HELICOPTER CRASH

posted by kjalaw on Aug 13th, 2011 at 8:01 am

Today, the trucking industry and those who monitor the trucking industry were waiting for President Obama’s official announcement that there would be new federal regulations in the fuel economy standards for commercial trucks.

It’s not that the regulations are a big surprise; the President would debut the final result of a long governmental process to implement new ways to maximize fuel efficiency in big rigs, semis, tractor trailers, and other commercial trucks riding American roadways.  However, a national tragedy has changed things.

President Obama’s Announcement of Precedent-Setting Fuel Regs for Trucking Industry Has Been Cancelled

Sadly, the White House notified those attending the Virginia meeting of the Engine Manufacturers Association/Truck Manufacturers Association that President Obama would not be attending their event in order to make his official announcement of this precedent-setting series of regulations. Instead, he will be traveling to travel to Dover Air Force Base with a Washington delegation, where they will honor and pay their respects to the 22 Navy SEALS, 5 Army crewmen, and 3 airmen that died July 30, 2011, in an helicopter crash in Afghanistan.

The crash goes on record as the single deadliest incident for the United States military since 2011, when the Afghanistan conflict began. It is also the largest death toll in the history of Special Ops, the U.S. Special Operations Command (which oversees military elite units e.g., the SEALs, the Green Berets, the Rangers, etc. ).

New Fuel Economy Regulations Unprecedented

Regardless of the President’s understandable unavailability in Virginia, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) went forward today with their formal announcement that the United States will now have federal regulations in place that are designed to improve fuel efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from medium and heavy-duty truck engines that power the nation’s trucking industry.

Working together with advocacy groups, trucking interests, and others since May 2010, the two federal agencies jointly built a final federal rule that is now federal law. It is anunprecedented federal action in the trucking industry, that will force truck manufacturers to lower carbon-dioxide emissions for commercial trucks and buses by as much as 20% by 2018, and it mandates that more fuel-efficient truck engines be available in the marketplace by 2014.

You can read and download the 8-page Regulatory Report released today by the Environmental Protection Agency here.

 

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INDIANAPOLIS I-69 CONSTRUCTION SERVES AS GOOD REMINDER OF THE REAL DANGERS OF ROAD WORK HAZARDS TO WORKERS AND DRIVERS

posted by kjalaw on Jul 6th, 2011 at 4:11 pm

WTHR of Indianapolis (Channel 13) is reporting that the big Indiana Department of Transportation project to renovate I-69 is about to cause a lot of commuter headaches in Fishers, as a major bridge project begins this week and isn’t projected to be completed until around Thanksgiving. Anyone driving I-69 near 126th Street is going to be diverted, regardless of which direction they are going, and 126th Street will be closed to traffic sometime soon.

What’s happening?

Here, the bridge is being widened from two lanes to four lanes each way. They are also putting in a lane for bicycles, and another lane for pedestrians. (Statewide, I-69 has been the subject of a major expansion since March 2004, when the Federal Highway Administration (FHA) okayed an interstate corridor for I-69 running between Evansville and Indianapolis.)

First things first, you’ll see crews with reflective vests putting up those concrete barriers along with the orange cones and barrels — these aren’t so much to reroute traffic as protect the construction workers on the job.

Road Hazards Can Cause Worker On the Job Injuries as well as Car Accidents and Traffic Pile Ups

The I-69 / 126th Street Bridge Construction Project gives a great example of the dangers of road construction and road hazards. This highway construction project, just like any road work, will bring cars, SUVs, trucks, big rigs, and other moving vehicles, very close to highway construction workers — at times, they will be extremely closed to each other.Construction workers die every year from work zone accidents, and they are particularly vulnerable to driver distraction.

Another danger in these kinds of construction projects are road hazards that can cause car crashes. Construction sites, however well tended, can have debris on the road which drivers may have to swerve to avoid hitting, or may run over causing a loss of control of their vehicle.

Let’s be careful out there!

 

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FEDS NTSB ANNOUNCE THE “MOST WANTED LIST” FOR SAFETY – CHANGES IN U.S. TRANSPORTATION NEEDED TO SAVE LIVES

posted by kjalaw on Jun 30th, 2011 at 8:28 am

This week, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) announced its list of the key safety issues impacting American roads today, which the NTSB has labeled its “Most Wanted List.” These are ten (10) changes deemed by the federal agency in charge of transportation issues as being the most important for government and industry to make happen in order to make roadways safer for all of us.

The NTSB 2011 Most Wanted List of Safety Issues

Each year, the NTSB issues its “Most Wanted List” and it’s been doing this successfully since 1990. However, the 2011 version does change things: this year’s list has a new design and the list itself is more broadly-based.

The issues that have made the NTSA 2011 Most Wanted List are as follows, click on the link for detailed discussion of the NTSA’s particular concerns on that topic:

* Promote pilot and air traffic controller professionalism
Address human fatigue
* Promote teen driving safety
Improve general aviation safety
* Improve motorcycle safety
* Require safety management systems
* Improve runway safety
Address alcohol-impaired driving
Improve bus occupant safety
Require image and onboard data recorders

These issues are extremely important for Americans today. These are real dangers that are causing serious injury and death in the United States, events that we discuss routinely here on this blog (e.g., bus accidentsrecorders, etc.) and which Kenneth J. Allen & Associates face each day, having made the seeking of justice for injury victims and their loved ones our life’s work.

Please take the time to review the NTSA Most Wanted List, and consider its impact upon your daily life: can you or your loved ones be safer on the road?

 

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U.S. SUPREME COURT RULES AGAINST PLAINTIFFS HARMED BY GENERIC DRUGS LIKE ACCUTANE, DARVOCET, ZOCOR, AND MORE: GENERIC DRUG COMPANIES WIN BIG

posted by kjalaw on Jun 28th, 2011 at 11:28 am

Earlier today, the United States Supreme Court issued its opinion in the case of Pliva, Inc. v. Mensing (5-4) that generic drug companies are not legally responsible and therefore will not be held liable for failing to warn consumers about the side effects of medications they sell, and of which they are well aware, if their packaging labels are identical to those of the original brand-name product.

The High Court ruled that federal law preempted any state law rulings that required these generic drug companies from letting people know about problems that these companies know about – by labels, or by writing letters to doctors, whatever. Seems that the generic drug companies are to coattail on the drug makers’ actions.

According to Justice Clarence Thomas (who wrote the majority opinion), it’s just too hard for drug manufacturers to have to deal with federal laws on consumer warnings along with state laws that might ask them to do more. So the generics aren’t going to have to do this, either. Preemption.

This will be a big problem for thousands of Americans who have sued for severe injuries resulting from taking the generic versions of drugs including Accutane, Darvocet, Reglan, and Zocor.

It is a big win for Big Pharma.

Once again, be careful out there. Don’t trust the product (including the drug) just because a doctor or pharmacist handed it over to you. Learn what it is, investigate for yourself, and trust your instincts. Get medical care and legal help when you think you may need it: don’t expect your health care professional to tell you to seek a second opinion or to find a lawyer

To read the Supreme Court opinion, go here.

 

If you or a loved one has been seriously injured or killed due to the wrongful acts of another, then you may have a legal claim for legal damages as well as the right for justice against the wrongdoer and you are welcomed to contact the Northwest Indiana and Chicagoland personal injury lawyers at Kenneth J. Allen & Associates to schedule a free initial legal consultation.

For the convenience of its clientele, Kenneth J. Allen & Associates offers five offices to serve those located in either the states of Illinois or Indiana.


 

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BOATING SEASON 2011 BEGINS: BE SAFE AND AVOID BOATING ACCIDENTS

posted by kjalaw on Jun 7th, 2011 at 5:27 pm

The Friday before Memorial Day, the annual Blessing of the Boats took place over by the Captain of the Helm statue near Dock Street in Chicago, officially opening Boating Season 2011.

Of course, lots of antsy locals were already getting their boats prepped and in the water – and they’ve been doing it since early April. Our time on Lake Michigan is never long enough, we have a short boating season up here, and the sooner you start getting your boat into Lake Michigan, the better, right?

Boating Safety and Boating Accidents

Last week was the annual National Safe Boating Week (May 21 – 27).  According to the latest boating accident statistics compiled by the United States Coast Guard, there were 102 boating accidents in Indiana in 2009; 25 people died in them.

The sad truth is that even with all the safety campaigns and other efforts, there will be Illinois families who leave their homes in the morning for a funfilled day on the water, unaware that their lives will never be the same because they will be in a boating accident that day. Please don’t be one of them.

Wear Life Jackets and Avoid BOI

Remember to wear safety gear – including life jackets – and never to board a boat where the one driving the boat is drunk. Not only is this smart, it’s the law: in Illinois, there are life jacket laws (mandatory for those under the age of 13 and on any watercraft less that 26? long) and the same types of laws that have been enacted for driving under the influence are in effect for boating.

 

If you or a loved one has been seriously injured or killed due to the wrongful acts of another, then you may have a legal claim for legal damages as well as the right for justice against the wrongdoer and you are welcomed to contact the Northwest Indiana and Chicagoland personal injury lawyers at Kenneth J. Allen & Associates to schedule a free initial legal consultation.

For the convenience of its clientele, Kenneth J. Allen & Associates offers five offices to serve those located in either the states of Illinois or Indiana.

 

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FEDS APPLAUD INDIANA’S NEW LAW BANNING TEXTING WHILE DRIVING; ILLINOIS DISTRACTED DRIVING LAW ALREADY ON THE BOOKS

posted by kjalaw on May 25th, 2011 at 8:46 am

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood gave a public attaboy to Indiana’s governor Mitch Daniels in a media statement where Indiana was recognized as the 32nd state to enact laws that make texting while driving illegal.  (It’s a victory of sorts for the feds, as Secretary LaHood is actively pushing states to pass laws like this as part of the U.S. Department of Transportation’s campaign against distracted driving.  For more information, check out the Transportation Department’s distracted driving website,Distraction.gov.)

July 2011: Indiana Texting While Driving Ban Goes Into Effect

In Indiana, starting July 1, 2011, you can be ticketed if you are caught texting behind the wheel – and this is going to make liability more serious in a personal injury civil matter if you’re in a car wreck while you’re doing it.

Indiana’s new law makes texting while driving illegal with a maximum fine of $500.  It also makes it against the law for Indiana drivers under 18 to use cell phones at all.  Period.

What about in Illinois?

This is old news in Illinois, which was the 17th state to enact a texting while driving ban. Governor Pat Quinn signed that into law back in August 2009.  In Illinois, if you text, surf the web, email, etc. while driving, it is a $1000 fine under Illinois Vehicle Code 625 ILCS 5/12-610.2.

 

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FEMA DEBUTS NEW EMERGENCY MESSAGING SYSTEM DIRECT TO YOUR CELL PHONE

posted by kjalaw on May 18th, 2011 at 9:50 am

Everyone recognizes those Emergency Alerts on television – suddenly, your program is interrupted by a series of beeps that are followed by an announcement that you’re not to worry: it’s just a test of the emergency announcement system.  This is a Test.  This is only a Test.

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Debuts Emergency Alert System for Your Phone.

FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) has just announced that it will be providing Americans with a text message emergency alert system.  It’s named the “Personal Localized Alerting Network” or PLAN. (You can get all the details in the FEMA May 2011 Press Release.)

Under PLAN, cellphone customers who opt for this service and have an enabled mobile device will be able to get text messages targeting their location (geographic region) and alerting them with details regarding any imminent threats in their area.  Think tornado.  Think flood.

FEMA is using cell towers in the various locations to target the cellphones in that location.  There will be 3 kinds of alerts sent through the chosen cell towers:

  1. alerts from the President;
  2. alerts involving threats to life and safety; and
  3. Amber Alerts.

Right now, the agency is mandating that the technology be available nationwide by April 2012.  AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon have already announced that they will start offering PLAN to their customers shortly.  (It’s a free app.)  New York City will run the beta– Mayor Bloomberg has already announced that PLAN will be available to New Yorkers before Christmas 2011.

Legal Impact Still Unknown in Injury Cases

Yes, this is a good idea.  However, will it have any impact on duty under the law?  If your cellphone got a text message that a tornado was in the vicinity, then will insurance defense attorneys argue in the future that you’re the proximate cause of failing to get out of harm’s way in time?

 

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