Illinois Truck Accident Authority Attorney911 Brings 25+ Years of Multi-Million Dollar Results and Former Insurance Defense Insider Secrets to Combat Walmart 18-Wheelers Amazon Delivery Vans FedEx Box Trucks and 80,000-Pound Semi-Tractors — We Have Recovered $50M+ for Families Including TBI ($5M+ Recovered) Amputation ($3.8M+ Settlement) and Wrongful Death — Our FMCSA Experts Beat Great West Casualty and Old Republic by Extracting Samsara ELD Motive Data and DriveCam Video Before the 30-Day Black Box Overwrite and Within 2 Hours of a Crash — Handling Jackknife Rollover and Underride Accidents for Drivers Pedestrians and Cyclists Hit by Dump Trucks Buses ($5M Insurance Minimum) and Rental Trucks — $750,000 Federal Insurance Minimums Exposed — Free 24/7 Consultation No Fee Unless We Win 1-888-ATTY-911 Hablamos Español
The Illinois Guide to 18-Wheeler & Commercial Truck Accident Litigation Imagine driving along I-80 outside of Joliet or heading south on I-57 toward Champaign. One moment, the road is clear; the next, 80,000 pounds of steel and cargo are jackknifing across four lanes of traffic. In an instant, your car is crushed, your life is changed, and the trucking company’s insurance team is already on their way to the scene to protect their profits. When an 80,000-pound truck strikes a 4,000-pound passenger vehicle, it isn't a "fender bender." It is a catastrophic event. At Attorney911, we founded our firm on the principle that injury victims deserve "Legal Emergency Lawyers™" who move as fast as the corporations they are fighting. Led by Ralph Manginello, our team brings over 25 years of courtroom experience to every Illinois trucking case we handle. We don’t just understand the law; we understand the industry secrets that trucking companies use to avoid paying for the damage they cause. Whether you were hit by a long-haul 18-wheeler, an Amazon delivery van, or a massive concrete mixer on a Chicago construction site, you are currently in a high-stakes battle for your future. The trucking company already has lawyers—often…