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Loving County Truck Accident & Oilfield Vehicle Crash Attorneys — Attorney911 (The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC) Fights Halliburton Water Tankers, Schlumberger Sand Haulers, Patterson-UTI Hotshots, and Every 80,000-Pound 18-Wheeler on SH 285 & US 285, Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Experience Including Permian Basin Catastrophic Injury Cases, Lupe Peña’s Former Insurance Defense Background Beats Great West Casualty & Zurich, We Extract Samsara & Motive ELD Data Before the 30-Day Black-Box Overwrite, $750,000 Federal Minimum Insurance Under 49 CFR § 387, TBI ($5M+ Recovered), Amputation ($3.8M+), Wrongful Death — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, 1-888-ATTY-911

May 13, 2026 26 min read
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Fatal 18-Wheeler & Tractor-Trailer Crashes in Loving County, Texas: What Families Need to Know

You’re reading this because someone you love didn’t come home.

A fully loaded 18-wheeler—80,000 pounds of steel, diesel, and cargo—crashed on a road most people in Loving County drive every day without thinking. Maybe it was U.S. Highway 285, where oilfield service trucks run between well sites in the Permian Basin, or State Highway 302, where sand haulers and water trucks move at all hours. Maybe it was a long-haul tractor-trailer on Interstate 10, where the speed limit jumps to 80 mph and the margin for error disappears.

Now, the carrier’s insurance adjuster is calling. The medical bills are arriving. The funeral arrangements are happening. And Texas law has already started a clock—one that doesn’t stop for grief, for confusion, or for the fact that you’re not ready to think about lawyers.

We’ve handled hundreds of these cases. We know what’s coming. And we know how to protect your family’s rights before the evidence disappears.

The Reality of a Fatal Truck Crash in Loving County

Loving County is the least populous county in Texas—just over 100 residents—but it sits in the heart of the Permian Basin, one of the most dangerous oilfield trucking corridors in the country. The roads here weren’t built for the volume of commercial traffic they now carry:

  • U.S. 285 (the “Death Highway”) runs north-south through the county, carrying water haulers, sand trucks, and frac spread convoys.
  • SH 302 connects to Orla and Pecos, where oilfield service companies like Halliburton, Schlumberger, and Patterson-UTI operate bases.
  • I-10, the major east-west freight corridor, cuts through Reeves County just south of Loving, where long-haul trucks move between El Paso and the Gulf Coast.

The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) doesn’t break down crash data for Loving County alone—its population is too small—but the Permian Basin region consistently ranks among the deadliest for commercial truck crashes in Texas. In 2024, Texas recorded 4,150 traffic deaths—one every 2 hours and 7 minutes. A disproportionate number of those involved oilfield service trucks, tankers, and long-haul semis.

When an 18-wheeler crashes here, the physics are brutal:

  • A fully loaded tractor-trailer at 65 mph needs 525 feet to stop—nearly two football fields.
  • A rear-end collision at those speeds generates 20–40G of force—enough to cause traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, or death even in a vehicle with airbags.
  • Underride crashes—where a passenger vehicle slides beneath a trailer—are fatal in nearly 100% of cases because the impact happens above the car’s crumple zone.

This isn’t hypothetical. It’s what happens when an 80,000-pound truck loses control on a two-lane highway, or when a driver falls asleep after a 28-hour shift, or when a carrier ignores a known brake defect because “it’ll make it to the next inspection.”

Texas Law Gives Your Family Rights—But the Clock Is Running

Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003, you have exactly two years from the date of the fatal injury to file a wrongful death lawsuit. That clock started the day of the crash—not the day of the funeral, not the day the autopsy report came in, not the day the police report was finalized.

If you miss this deadline, your case dies procedurally. The carrier’s insurance company will walk away from a viable claim because the law no longer requires them to negotiate.

Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Texas?

Texas law (§ 71.004) gives independent claims to:

  • The surviving spouse
  • The children (biological or adopted)
  • The parents of the deceased

Each of these family members has a separate legal claim. The carrier’s adjuster will try to settle with one person—usually the spouse—before the others realize they have their own rights. We file claims for every eligible family member to ensure no one is left out.

The Survival Action: Compensation for Your Loved One’s Pain Before Death

In addition to wrongful death claims, the estate of the deceased can file a survival action (§ 71.021) for:

  • Medical bills incurred before death
  • Physical pain and mental anguish the victim endured between injury and death
  • Funeral and burial expenses

This is a separate claim from wrongful death, with its own damages calculation.

The Federal Regulations the Carrier Was Supposed to Follow

Commercial trucking is one of the most heavily regulated industries in the U.S. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSR, 49 C.F.R. Parts 390–399) set strict rules for:

  • Driver qualifications (Part 391)
  • Hours of service (HOS) (Part 395)
  • Vehicle maintenance (Part 396)
  • Cargo securement (Part 393)
  • Drug and alcohol testing (Part 382)

When a carrier violates these rules, Texas law treats it as negligence per se—meaning the violation itself proves fault.

The Most Common Violations in Fatal Truck Crashes

Violation Regulation What It Means
Hours of Service (HOS) violations 49 C.F.R. § 395.3 Drivers are limited to 11 hours of driving in a 14-hour window, after 10 consecutive hours off duty. Violations cause fatigue-related crashes.
Falsified logbooks 49 C.F.R. § 395.8(e) Drivers (and carriers) lie about driving time to meet deadlines. ELD (Electronic Logging Device) data exposes this.
Unqualified drivers 49 C.F.R. § 391.11 Drivers must have a valid CDL, pass a medical exam, and have no disqualifying offenses (DUI, reckless driving).
Poor vehicle maintenance 49 C.F.R. § 396.3 Carriers must inspect, repair, and maintain trucks. Brake failures, tire blowouts, and lighting issues are common causes of crashes.
Improper cargo loading 49 C.F.R. § 393.100 Unsecured loads can shift, fall, or cause rollovers. This is a leading cause of jackknife crashes.
Drug/alcohol violations 49 C.F.R. § 382.303 Post-accident drug/alcohol testing is mandatory. A positive result can trigger punitive damages.

Lupe Peña, our associate attorney, spent years working for insurance defense firms. He knows how carriers manipulate logs, pressure drivers to skip inspections, and ignore safety violations—because he used to help them do it.

“I’ve reviewed hundreds of surveillance videos and social media posts as a defense attorney. Here’s the truth: insurance companies take innocent activity out of context. They freeze one frame of you moving ‘normally’ and ignore the ten minutes of you struggling before and after. They’re not documenting your life—they’re building ammunition against you.”

The Evidence Is Disappearing Right Now

The carrier’s legal team started working the night of the crash. Their goal? Control the evidence before you can.

What They’re Trying to Hide

Evidence Type How Long Before It’s Gone Why It Matters
Dashcam footage 7–14 days Shows driver distraction, fatigue, or reckless driving
ELD (Electronic Logging Device) data 30–180 days Proves HOS violations and falsified logs
Black box (ECM) data 30–180 days Records speed, braking, and crash forces
Dispatch records Carrier-controlled Shows pressure to meet unrealistic deadlines
Maintenance logs 49 C.F.R. § 396.3 Proves neglected repairs
Driver qualification file 49 C.F.R. § 391.51 Reveals prior violations or fake certifications
Surveillance footage (gas stations, businesses) 7–14 days Captures driver behavior before the crash
Toll road records (TxTag, EZ Tag) Varies Confirms route and speed

We send preservation letters within 24 hours to lock down this evidence. If the carrier destroys or “loses” it, we argue spoliation of evidence—which can lead to an adverse inference (the jury assumes the missing evidence would have hurt their case).

Who Is Really Responsible? (It’s Not Just the Driver)

Most personal injury firms only sue the driver. We sue everyone who contributed to the crash.

Potential Defendants in a Fatal Truck Crash Case

Defendant Why They’re Liable
The truck driver Negligence (speeding, distraction, fatigue, impairment)
The motor carrier (trucking company) Respondeat superior (vicarious liability for the driver’s actions) + direct negligence (hiring, training, supervision)
The freight broker Negligent selection (hiring an unsafe carrier) – Miller v. C.H. Robinson
The shipper Unsafe loading or scheduling (e.g., forcing a driver to meet an unrealistic deadline)
The maintenance contractor Failure to inspect/repair (e.g., brake or tire defects)
The parts manufacturer Defective equipment (e.g., faulty brakes, tires, or underride guards)
The road designer (TxDOT or county) Dangerous road conditions (e.g., missing guardrails, poor signage) – Texas Tort Claims Act
The parent corporation Alter-ego or single-business-enterprise theory (if the carrier is a subsidiary)

House Bill 19 (Texas HB 19, 2021) forces carriers to bifurcate trials—meaning they try to keep evidence of their own negligence out of the first phase. We build the case so that Phase 2 becomes inevitable.

What Is Your Case Worth? (It’s More Than the Adjuster’s First Offer)

The insurance adjuster’s first offer is designed to be accepted before you know the full value of your claim. They’re betting you’ll take a lowball settlement because you’re grieving, overwhelmed, or don’t know your rights.

Texas Damages in a Fatal Truck Crash Case

Category What It Covers Example (Loving County Context)
Past medical bills Emergency care, hospitalization, surgery Air ambulance from Reeves County Hospital to Odessa’s Medical Center Hospital
Future medical care Lifetime treatment, rehabilitation, home modifications Traumatic brain injury (TBI) care at Odessa’s West Texas Rehab Center
Lost earning capacity Income the deceased would have earned Oilfield worker (average salary: $80,000–$120,000/year)
Funeral and burial costs Immediate expenses Average funeral cost in Texas: $7,000–$12,000
Pain and suffering (survival action) Physical pain and mental anguish before death Conscious pain from injuries before passing
Mental anguish (wrongful death) Emotional trauma of losing a loved one Loss of companionship, guidance, and support
Loss of inheritance Future financial support the deceased would have provided College funds, retirement savings
Exemplary (punitive) damages Punishment for gross negligence DUI, falsified logs, or ignoring prior violations

Multi-Million-Dollar Case Examples (Every Case Is Unique)

Case Type Result Why It Matters
Logging brain injury $5+ million settlement Shows catastrophic injury compensation is possible
Car accident amputation $3.8+ million settlement Medical complications (infections) increased damages
Trucking wrongful death Millions recovered Demonstrates wrongful death claims are viable
Maritime back injury $2+ million settlement Proves employer negligence can be proven
BP Texas City explosion Involved in litigation Shows corporate accountability in industrial cases

Every case is unique. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

The Insurance Company’s Playbook (And How We Counter It)

The adjuster’s job is to minimize your claim. Here’s how they’ll try to lowball you—and how we fight back.

1. “The crash was unavoidable.”

Their argument: “The driver couldn’t have stopped in time.”
Our response:

  • Federal law (49 C.F.R. § 392.14) requires commercial drivers to reduce speed for conditions (fog, rain, traffic).
  • Black box data shows speed at impact.
  • Dashcam footage reveals driver distraction or fatigue.

2. “You were partially at fault.”

Their argument: “You were speeding / not wearing a seatbelt / changed lanes.”
Our response:

  • Texas follows modified comparative negligence (51% bar). Even if you were 50% at fault, you still recover.
  • The truck driver had a higher duty of care under FMCSR.
  • Seatbelt use doesn’t bar recovery—it only reduces damages.

3. “Your injuries aren’t that serious.”

Their argument: “You didn’t go to the hospital right away.”
Our response:

  • Adrenaline masks pain—many TBI and spinal cord injury symptoms take days to appear.
  • Medical records document the full extent of injuries.
  • We work with top Texas medical experts to prove causation.

4. “This is our final offer.”

Their argument: “Take it or leave it.”
Our response:

  • We file a lawsuit to force full discovery.
  • We depose the driver, dispatcher, and safety manager to uncover hidden violations.
  • We push for trial—most cases settle before reaching a jury.

5. “The driver was an independent contractor.”

Their argument: “We’re not responsible for Amazon DSP or FedEx Ground drivers.”
Our response:

  • Three tests defeat this defense:
    1. ABC Test – The driver was not free from company control.
    2. Economic Reality Test – The company controlled routes, schedules, and pay.
    3. Right-to-Control Test – The company monitored performance via cameras and apps.
  • Amazon, FedEx, and UPS have lost cases on this issue.

What Happens Next? (The Attorney 911 Process)

We don’t just take your case—we build it from day one like it’s going to trial.

Step 1: Immediate Evidence Preservation (First 48 Hours)

Send preservation letters to the carrier, broker, and shipper
Pull FMCSA records (SMS scores, driver history, inspection reports)
Subpoena ELD and black box data before it’s overwritten
Photograph the scene and vehicles before repairs
Interview witnesses before memories fade

Step 2: Full Investigation (Days 1–30)

🔍 Driver Qualification File (DQF) – Prior violations, fake certifications
🔍 Maintenance Records – Brake, tire, and lighting inspections
🔍 Dispatch Logs – Pressure to meet unrealistic deadlines
🔍 Drug/Alcohol Test Results – Post-accident screening
🔍 Surveillance Footage – Gas stations, businesses near the crash
🔍 Accident Reconstruction – Speed, braking, impact forces

Step 3: Expert Analysis

📊 Medical experts – Prove causation and future care needs
📊 Vocational experts – Calculate lost earning capacity
📊 Economic experts – Project lifetime damages
📊 Life-care planners – Develop long-term care plans

Step 4: Litigation (If Necessary)

⚖️ File lawsuit before the 2-year deadline
⚖️ Depose the driver, dispatcher, and safety manager
⚖️ Motion practice to limit overbroad defense requests
⚖️ Mediation – Push for fair settlement
⚖️ Trial – Prepare for every case as if it’s going to a jury

The Two-Year Clock Is Running. What Do You Do Now?

Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003 gives you two years from the date of the fatal injury to file a wrongful death lawsuit. Not two years from the funeral. Not two years from when you feel ready. Two years from the crash.

The carrier’s legal team started working the night of the wreck. The longer you wait, the more evidence they control—and the more of it disappears.

Your Next Steps

  1. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) for a free case evaluation.
    • We’ll review your case in 15 minutes or less.
    • We’ll tell you exactly what your case may be worth—no obligation.
  2. Do NOT give a recorded statement to the insurance adjuster.
    • Their questions are designed to minimize your claim.
  3. Do NOT sign anything without talking to us first.
    • The first offer is always a fraction of what your case is worth.
  4. Let us handle the evidence.
    • We’ll send preservation letters, pull FMCSA records, and subpoena the black box data before it’s gone.

Why Choose Attorney 911 for Your Loving County Truck Crash Case?

Most personal injury firms don’t know trucking law. They see a crash. They see a settlement. They don’t see the federal regulations, the corporate negligence, or the multi-million-dollar verdicts that change how carriers operate.

We do.

1. Ralph Manginello: 27+ Years Fighting for Texas Injury Victims

  • Licensed in Texas since 1998 (Texas Bar #24007597)
  • Admitted to U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas (covers Loving, Reeves, Ward, Pecos, and Culberson Counties)
  • Involved in BP Texas City Refinery explosion litigation (one of the few Texas firms with this experience)
  • Cheshire Academy Hall of Fame inductee (2021) – basketball, lacrosse, and academic honors
  • Fluent in Spanish – We serve bilingual families in Loving County and across Texas

2. Lupe Peña: The Insurance Defense Flip

Lupe spent years working for insurance companies, calculating claim valuations and hiring “independent” medical examiners to lowball victims.

Now, he uses that knowledge against them.

“I’ve reviewed hundreds of surveillance videos and social media posts as a defense attorney. Here’s the truth: insurance companies take innocent activity out of context. They freeze one frame of you moving ‘normally’ and ignore the ten minutes of you struggling before and after. They’re not documenting your life—they’re building ammunition against you.”

3. We Sue Trucking Companies, Not Just Drivers

Most firms stop at the driver. We sue:
The carrier (negligent hiring, training, supervision)
The freight broker (negligent selection of an unsafe carrier)
The shipper (unsafe loading or scheduling)
The maintenance contractor (failure to inspect/repair)
The parts manufacturer (defective brakes, tires, or underride guards)
The parent corporation (alter-ego or single-business-enterprise theory)

4. $50+ Million Recovered for Texas Families

We’ve secured multi-million-dollar settlements and verdicts in cases like yours. Some examples:

  • $5+ million for a brain injury victim in a logging accident
  • $3.8+ million for a car accident amputation with medical complications
  • $2+ million for a back injury in a maritime case
  • Millions recovered in wrongful death trucking cases

Every case is unique. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

5. 24/7 Live Staff (Not an Answering Service)

When you call 1-888-ATTY-911, you’ll speak to a real person—not a machine. We’re available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

6. No Fee Unless We Win

  • 33.33% pre-trial
  • 40% if trial is required
  • No upfront costs
  • “You may still be responsible for court costs and case expenses.”

What Loving County Families Say About Us

We’ve helped hundreds of Texas families after catastrophic truck crashes. Here’s what they say:

“Melanie was excellent. She kept me informed and when she said she would call me back, she did. I got to speak with Ralph Manginello once and knew quickly the way his firm was ran.”
Brian Butchee

“When I felt I had no hope or direction, Leonor reached out to me… She took all the weight of my worries off my shoulders.”
Stephanie Hernandez

“One company said they would not except my case. Then I got a call from Manginello… I got a call to come pick up this handsome check.”
Donald Wilcox

“Leonor is the best!!! She was able to assist me with my case within 6 months.”
Tymesha Galloway

“One of Houston’s Great Men Trae Tha Truth has recommended this law firm. So if he is vouching for them then I know they do good work.”
Jacqueline Johnson

“You know if TraeAbn tells you it’s the right way to go best attorney out here you can’t go wrong.”
Erica Perales

“Hablamos Español. Especialmente Miss Zulema, who is always very kind and always translates.”
Celia Dominguez

Loving County Truck Crash FAQ

1. How long do I have to file a wrongful death lawsuit in Texas?

Two years from the date of the fatal injury under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 16.003. The clock starts the day of the crash—not the funeral, not the autopsy report, not when you feel ready.

2. Can I still recover if my loved one was partially at fault?

Yes. Texas follows modified comparative negligence (51% bar). Even if your loved one was 50% at fault, you can still recover. If they were 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing.

3. What if the truck driver was an independent contractor (like Amazon DSP or FedEx Ground)?

We sue the company that controls the driver—not just the driver. Amazon, FedEx, and UPS have lost cases where they tried to hide behind the “independent contractor” defense.

4. What if the trucking company is based in another state?

It doesn’t matter. If the crash happened in Texas, Texas law applies. We file in the county where the crash occurred (Loving, Reeves, Ward, or Pecos County).

5. What if the truck driver was arrested for DWI or manslaughter?

A criminal conviction can be used as evidence in your civil case. We work with prosecutors to leverage criminal evidence in your favor.

6. How much is my wrongful death case worth?

It depends on:
The deceased’s age, occupation, and earning capacity
Medical bills and funeral expenses
Pain and suffering before death
Loss of companionship and support
Punitive damages (if gross negligence is proven)

We’ve recovered millions for Texas families in cases like yours.

7. What if the insurance company already made an offer?

Do not accept it without talking to us first. The first offer is always a lowball—designed to be accepted before you know the full value of your claim.

8. Do I need a lawyer for mediation?

Yes. The insurance company’s lawyers will be there. You need someone who knows their tactics.

9. What if I don’t speak English?

Hablamos Español. Lupe Peña is fluent, and we have bilingual staff. Your immigration status does not affect your right to compensation.

10. What if I already have a lawyer but I’m not happy?

You can switch lawyers at any time. If your current attorney isn’t returning calls or pushing you to settle too low, you have options.

Loving County Truck Crash Resources

Emergency Contacts

  • Loving County Sheriff’s Office: (432) 377-2411
  • Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) – Pecos District: (432) 445-4901
  • Reeves County Hospital (Pecos): (432) 447-3551
  • Medical Center Hospital (Odessa): (432) 640-1000

Federal & State Agencies

Legal Resources

Final Warning: The Evidence Is Disappearing

The carrier’s legal team started working the night of the crash. The longer you wait, the more evidence they control—and the more of it disappears.

  • Dashcam footage (7–14 days)
  • ELD data (30–180 days)
  • Black box data (30–180 days)
  • Surveillance footage (7–14 days)
  • Witness memories (fading every day)

The two-year clock under Texas law is already running.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) now for a free case evaluation. We’ll tell you exactly what your case may be worth—no obligation.

We don’t get paid unless we win for you. But the carrier’s insurance company is already working against you. Don’t wait. Protect your family’s rights today.

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