Camp County Car Accident and 18-Wheeler Truck Crash Attorneys Attorney911 Led by Ralph Manginello with 27+ Years and Former Insurance Defense Attorney Lupe Peña Using Insider Tactics to Defeat Geico State Farm Progressive Great West Casualty and Old Republic for Victims of 80,000-Pound Commercial Vehicle Crashes Against 4,000-Pound Passenger Vehicles Involving Amazon FedEx UPS Walmart Logging and Oilfield Halliburton Trucks with $50 Million Plus Recovered Including $5 Million TBI $3.8 Million Amputation and $2.5 Million Truck Crash Settlements Leveraging Samsara ELD ECM Data Extraction and FMCSA $750,000 Federal Minimum Violations for Uber Lyft Rideshare $1M Policy Limit Drunk Driving Dram Shop Motorcycle Pedestrian Maritime and Plant Explosion Injuries Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win Call 1-888-ATTY-911 4.9 Star Legal Emergency Lawyers
Motor Vehicle Accident Lawyer in Camp County, Texas | Attorney911 The Camp County Reality: When Every Mile of Rural Highway Carries Risk Picture this: You're driving north on US Highway 271 through Pittsburg, heading toward Mount Pleasant for work, when an 18-wheeler drifts across the centerline. Or you're leaving Lake Bob Sandlin State Park after a weekend trip, navigating the winding roads of Camp County, when a distracted driver blows through the intersection at Highway 11 and Farm-to-Market Road 556. In an instant, everything changes. At Attorney911, we've spent 27+ years fighting for families across Texas, from the dense corridors of Houston to the rural highways of Camp County and throughout the 62nd Judicial District. We know that Camp County's landscape—rolling hills, lake recreation areas, and agricultural routes—creates unique dangers. Rural crashes in Texas are 2.66 times more likely to be fatal than urban collisions, and with Camp County's position in Northeast Texas, surrounded by Upshur, Harrison, Gregg, Smith, and Wood Counties, our roads see everything from heavy truck traffic heading to the Permian Basin to SUVs full of families heading to Lake Cypress Springs. The statistics are sobering. In 2024, Texas had 4,150 traffic deaths—one every 2 hours and…