Clarke County 18-Wheeler Accident Attorneys: Attorney911 Brings 25+ Years of Multi-Million Dollar Trucking Litigation Experience with Ralph Manginello Managing Partner Since 1998 and $50+ Million Recovered Including $5+ Million Brain Injury and $3.8+ Million Amputation Settlements, Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Exposing Insurance Company Tactics From Inside, FMCSA 49 CFR 390-399 Masters Hunting Hours of Service Violations with Black Box and ELD Data Extraction for Jackknife, Rollover, Underride, Tire Blowout and Brake Failure Crashes, Catastrophic Injury Specialists for TBI, Spinal Cord Injury and Wrongful Death, Federal Court Admitted with 4.9 Star Google Rating from 251 Reviews, Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, Call 1-888-ATTY-911
When an 80,000-Pound Truck Changes Everything: Your Guide to 18-Wheeler Accident Claims in Clarke County The impact was catastrophic. One moment you're driving through Clarke County on I-35 or navigating the rural highways near Osceola, Woodburn, or Murray. The next, an 80,000-pound semi-truck has destroyed your life. If you're reading this from a hospital room in Clarke County—or if you're grieving a loved one who never made it home from a trucking accident on Iowa's rural roads—you need answers now. We get it. We've spent over 25 years fighting for families just like yours across Iowa and beyond. Ralph Manginello has been holding trucking companies accountable since 1998, and our firm has recovered multi-million dollar settlements for victims of catastrophic trucking accidents. We know the specific dangers lurking on Clarke County's agricultural highways and interstate corridors. And we know that every hour you wait, evidence disappears. You don't pay us unless we win. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 right now for a free consultation. But first, you need to understand what you're up against. Why Clarke County 18-Wheeler Accidents Are Different Clarke County isn't like Houston or Chicago. When a semi-truck jackknifes on I-35 near the Missouri border, or when an overloaded grain…