Montgomery County’s Truck Accident & Commercial Vehicle Crash Attorneys — Attorney911 (The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC) Brings 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Experience to Montgomery County’s Highways: I-45, SH 105, FM 1484, and the Burgeoning US 59 Freight Corridor, Where Walmart 18-Wheelers, Amazon Delivery Vans, FedEx Box Trucks, Sysco Refrigerated Freight, and Halliburton Oilfield Haulers Collide With Passenger Vehicles at 80,000-Pound Force, We Extract Samsara, Motive, and Qualcomm OmniTRACS ELD Data Before Trucking Companies Overwrite Black Boxes in 30 Days, Lupe Peña — Former Insurance Defense Attorney — Litigates Against Great West Casualty, Old Republic, Zurich, and Self-Insured Corporate Fleets, $50M+ Recovered for Texas Families Including $5M+ Brain Injury, $3.8M+ Amputation, and $2.5M+ Truck Crash Settlements, $750,000 Federal Minimum Insurance Under 49 CFR § 387, Pedestrians and Cyclists Struck by Trucks in Montgomery County’s Growing Urban Centers — Conroe, The Woodlands, Magnolia — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Fatal 18-Wheeler and Tractor-Trailer Crashes in Montgomery County, Texas: What Families Need to Know You’re reading this because someone you love didn’t come home from one of Montgomery County’s roads. Maybe it was I-45 near The Woodlands during the morning commute surge. Maybe it was FM 1488 between Magnolia and Conroe, where oilfield service trucks run day and night. Maybe it was the feeder road off Highway 105, where a fully loaded tractor-trailer failed to yield at a stop sign. The corridor doesn’t matter as much as the weight: 80,000 pounds of steel, diesel, and cargo moving at highway speed. When that weight meets a passenger vehicle, the physics leaves no room for error—and the legal aftermath leaves no room for delay. Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 16.003 started a two-year clock the day of the crash. Not the day of the funeral. Not the day the autopsy report was finalized. Not the day you felt ready to think about a lawyer. The day of the crash. Under § 71.001, you—whether you’re the surviving spouse, child, or parent—hold an independent wrongful-death claim. Under § 71.021, your loved one’s estate holds a separate survival action for the conscious pain…