Randolph County 18-Wheeler Accident Attorneys: Attorney911 Led by Ralph Manginello with 25+ Years Federal Court Experience and $50+ Million Recovered Alongside Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Who Knows Every Carrier Tactic From Inside FMCSA 49 CFR Parts 390-399 Experts Hours of Service Violation Hunters Black Box ELD Data Extraction Specialists for Jackknife Rollover Underride Override Tire Blowout Brake Failure and All Truck Crashes Catastrophic Injury Specialists for TBI Spinal Cord Amputation Wrongful Death Multi-Million Dollar Results Including $5+ Million Brain Injury and $3.8+ Million Amputation Settlements 4.9 Star Google Rating 251+ Reviews Legal Emergency Lawyers Trademark Trial Lawyers Achievement Association Million Dollar Member Featured ABC13 KHOU Houston Chronicle Hablamos Español Free 24/7 Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Call 1-888-ATTY-911
The Impact Was Catastrophic. One Moment You're Driving Through Randolph County's Rolling Hills on US-431, the Next an 80,000-Pound Kenworth Is Jackknifing Across Your Lane. That's the brutal reality of 18-wheeler accidents in Randolph County. When a fully loaded semi-truck loses control on the curved stretches near Wedowee or comes barreling down I-20 toward the Georgia line, there's no such thing as a "minor" collision. The physics are devastating—20 tons of steel against your 4,000-pound sedan isn't a crash; it's a crushing. At Attorney911, we don't handle fender-benders. We fight for Randolph County families shattered by catastrophic trucking accidents. With 25+ years of making negligent trucking companies pay, Ralph Manginello has recovered multi-million dollar settlements for truck accident victims across Alabama and Texas. Our team includes associate attorney Lupe Peña—a former insurance defense lawyer who spent years inside the system learning exactly how trucking insurers minimize claims. Now he uses that insider knowledge against them. Every 16 minutes, someone in America is injured in a commercial truck crash. On Randolph County's busy corridors—where timber trucks haul through Talladega National Forest and freight carriers race between Atlanta and Birmingham—the risk is even higher. If you're reading this from a hospital room…