Osborne County 18-Wheeler Accident Attorneys: Attorney911 Brings 25+ Years of Multi-Million Dollar Trucking Verdicts Led by Ralph P. Manginello With Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Exposing Every Carrier Tactic, Federal Court Admitted FMCSA 49 CFR Regulation Masters Who Hunt Hours of Service Violations and Extract Black Box and ELD Data From Rural Highway Crashes, Complete Coverage of Jackknife Rollover Underride Tire Blowouts Brake Failures and Cargo Spills, Catastrophic Injury Specialists for TBI Spinal Cord Paralysis Amputation and Wrongful Death, $50 Million Plus Recovered for Families, 4.9 Star Google Rating With 251 Reviews, Legal Emergency Lawyers Trademark, Hablamos Español, Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Available 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911
When an 80,000-pound semi-truck slams into a passenger vehicle on the rural highways of Osborne County, Kansas, physics takes over in brutal fashion. Your sedan weighs maybe 4,000 pounds. The grain hauler or livestock truck that just crossed the centerline of U.S. Route 281 weighs twenty times that. In the split second before impact, there is no contest—only devastation. We've seen what happens when trucking companies operating through Osborne County put profits over safety. We've walked through wheat fields littered with debris from jackknifed rigs on icy January mornings. We've sat with families in Portis and Alton who lost loved ones to fatigued drivers pushing past federal limits on I-70. And we've held corporate carriers accountable when their negligence changed Kansas lives forever. At Attorney911, we don't just handle 18-wheeler cases—we fight them with the ferocity your family deserves. Our managing partner, Ralph Manginello, has spent over 25 years inside courtrooms dismantling trucking company defenses. Since 1998, he's represented catastrophic injury victims with a singular focus: making careless carriers pay. With admission to federal court in the Southern District of Texas and a track record that includes involvement in the BP Texas City refinery litigation—a disaster that killed 15 workers…