Bosque County Car Accident & 18-Wheeler Truck Crash Attorneys Attorney911 Managing Partner Ralph Manginello 27+ Years With Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Using Insider Tactics To Defeat Great West Casualty State Farm Progressive Geico Colossus Systems $50+ Million Recovered Including $5M Logging Traumatic Brain Injury $3.8M Amputation Settlement $2.5M Truck Crash Recovery 80,000-Pound FMCSA 49 CFR Violator Jackknife Rollover Underride Samsara ELD ECM Data Extraction Amazon FedEx UPS Walmart Halliburton Concrete Mixer Dump Truck Oilfield Hauler DUI Dram Shop Liability Uber Lyft Rideshare $1M Policy Limits Motorcycle Pedestrian 28x Lethality Wrongful Death Spinal Cord Paralysis Maritime Jones Act Offshore Plant Explosion Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Call 1-888-ATTY-911
If you’ve been injured in a motor vehicle accident in Bosque County, you already know that the rural roads of Central Texas don’t forgive mistakes. State Highway 6 cuts through Meridian and Clifton carrying commercial truck traffic between I-35 and I-20, while Farm-to-Market roads like 56 and 174 connect tight-knit communities with little shoulder room and even less margin for error. In 2024, Texas recorded 4,150 traffic fatalities statewide, with rural crashes proving 2.66 times more deadly than urban accidents per mile driven. Here in Bosque County—where the nearest Level I Trauma Center may be an hour away in Waco or Fort Worth—those statistics represent neighbors, commuters, and family members heading to work in Hillsboro or Waco who never made it home. At Attorney911, we represent injury victims across Bosque County, from the Norwegian-heritage streets of Clifton to the courthouse square in Meridian, and everywhere in between: Valley Mills, Cranfills Gap, Iredell, Morgan, and Walnut Springs. Ralph Manginello has spent 27 years fighting for Texas families, and our firm includes a former insurance defense attorney—Lupe Peña—who spent years learning exactly how carriers value claims before he decided to fight for injured people instead. When an 18-wheeler rolls through Bosque County…