Wexford County 18-Wheeler Accident Victims Trust Attorney911 Where Federal Court Admitted Trial Attorney Ralph Manginello Brings 25+ Years and $50+ Million Recovered Including $5M Logging Brain Injury $3.8M Amputation and $2.5M Truck Crash Results Alongside Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Exposing Carrier Tactics—We Master Interstate FMCSA 49 CFR 390-399 Regulations Hunt Hours of Service Violations Extract Black Box ELD Data and Litigate Jackknife Rollover Underride Wide Turn Blind Spot Brake Failure Cargo Spill Crashes on Northern Michigan Highways—Catastrophic TBI Spinal Cord Paralysis Amputation Wrongful Death Specialists Offer Free 24/7 Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Advance All Costs Same-Day Spoliation Hablamos Español 1-888-ATTY-911
When an 80,000-pound truck loses control on an icy Michigan highway, there's no time to react. In Wexford County, where US-131 cuts through the heart of the county and winter storms turn roads into ice sheets, these crashes happen fast—and they change lives forever. We've spent over 25 years fighting for trucking accident victims across Michigan. From our work on catastrophic injury cases to our insider knowledge of how insurance companies operate, we know what it takes to hold trucking companies accountable when they put dangerous drivers on the road. And when you or someone you love has been hurt in a Wexford County trucking accident, you need that experience on your side now—not later. What Makes 18-Wheeler Accidents Different in Wexford County Your car weighs about 4,000 pounds. The semi that just hit you? Up to 80,000 pounds fully loaded. That's not a collision—it's a demolition. The physics are brutal. An 18-wheeler traveling at 65 miles per hour needs nearly two football fields—525 feet—to come to a complete stop. In winter conditions on US-131 or M-55 through Wexford County, with black ice and snow-packed lanes, that stopping distance can double. Meanwhile, your sedan needs about 300 feet to stop…