Johnson County 18-Wheeler Accident Attorneys: Attorney911 brings Managing Partner Ralph Manginello’s 25+ Years Federal Court experience alongside former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña’s insider knowledge exposing carrier tactics while mastering FMCSA 49 CFR Parts 390-399 Hours of Service Violations and Black Box Data Extraction for Jackknife Rollover Underride Rear-End Blind Spot Tire Blowout Brake Failure Cargo Spill and Fatigued Driver crashes specializing in Traumatic Brain Injury Spinal Cord Injury Amputation Severe Burns and Wrongful Death having recovered $50M+ including $5M Brain Injury $3.8M Amputation and $2.5M Truck Crash settlements with Nuclear Verdict Awareness Trial Lawyers Achievement Association Million Dollar Member 4.9 Star Google Rating 251 Reviews 290 Educational Videos Legal Emergency Lawyers Free 24/7 Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Hablamos Espanol 1-888-ATTY-911
When an 80,000-pound truck loses control on an Ozark mountain curve, you don't get a second chance. If you've been injured in an 18-wheeler accident in Johnson County, Arkansas, you're facing a battle against a trucking company that already has lawyers protecting their interests. At Attorney911, we don't just handle trucking cases—we specialize in them. Ralph Manginello has spent over 25 years fighting for Arkansas families devastated by commercial truck crashes, and we've recovered multi-million dollar settlements for victims just like you. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 today, because evidence disappears fast on those winding mountain roads. Why 18-Wheeler Accidents in Johnson County Are Different Johnson County sits in the heart of the Ozark Mountains, where US-64, US-65, and the future I-57 corridor create challenging conditions for commercial trucks. When an 18-wheeler crashes on these hilly, winding Arkansas highways, the results are rarely minor. An average car weighs about 4,000 pounds. A fully loaded tractor-trailer can weigh 80,000 pounds—twenty times heavier than your vehicle. The physics alone ensure catastrophic outcomes. A truck traveling 65 mph on a downgrade near Hagarville or Ozone needs nearly 525 feet to stop—that's almost two football fields. When ice storms hit our Ozark hills in winter, that stopping…