NTSB-Investigated Phoenix Milk Truck Crash & Wrongful Death: Four Killed, Eleven Injured When a Fatigue-Impaired Tractor-Trailer Driver Plowed Into Stopped Traffic at Highway Speed Without Braking, the Cab and a Passenger Vehicle Consumed by Fire — Attorney911 Pursues Arizona Milk Transport and the Dairy Shippers Behind 70-80 Hour Workweeks With No Fatigue Management Program, Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Practice, Lupe Peña the Former Insurance-Defense Insider, We Pull the ELD and ECM Black-Box Data Before the Overwrite and Mine the 1,800-Page NTSB Docket for Carrier Oversight Failures, 49 CFR 392.3 Prohibits Fatigued Driving Regardless of the Agricultural Hours-of-Service Exemption, Arizona’s Constitutional No-Damage-Cap Rule and Punitive Damages for Conscious Disregard, the Firm Has Recovered $2.5M+ in Truck-Crash Cases and Millions in Wrongful Death — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Phoenix Milk Truck Fatigue Crash: NTSB Finds Carrier Failure, 4 Dead, 11 Injured — Arizona Wrongful Death and Injury Claims If you are reading this page, someone you love was on that eastbound Phoenix highway on June 9, 2021. You may have spent the last two years trying to understand how four people died and eleven were injured in a crash that a federal safety board has now concluded was entirely preventable. You may be staring at medical bills, funeral costs, and an insurance adjuster who sounds sympathetic and is not. And you may have just learned that the deadline to hold someone accountable in court is measured in weeks, not years. We are going to tell you everything we know about this crash, everything the federal investigation found, and everything Arizona law allows your family to pursue — because the more you understand before you talk to the insurance company, the less they can take from you. This page is not a sales pitch. It is a protection document, written by trial attorneys who build these cases, for the families who are living inside one. Here is the first thing you need to know: the National Transportation Safety Board…