Accident scenes can be gruesome, but sometimes, an accident happens that takes gruesomeness to another level. A recent accident involving an overturned tractor trailer resulted in a highway strewn with dead chicken parts. The wreckage ended up on the southbound side of I-55, near mile marker 76. The driver said that he was traveling north when the trailer portion of his rig malfunctioned. As he lost control of the truck, it went into the median and flipped over the barrier onto the southbound side of the road. Fortunately, the chicken parts that got scattered about the accident scene were the only gruesome discoveries in this wreck. The truck driver didn’t exhibit any signs of injury after the crash.

When cars collide, it can make a mess in the road. When one of the vehicles in a wreck is a tractor trailer, the potential for damage and destruction is even greater. There are other differences between tractor trailer accidents and accidents that involve only passenger vehicles. It is useful for all drivers to know what the differences are between accidents involving passenger vehicles only and accidents involving eighteen-wheelers. One difference is that tractor trailers are driven by professional drivers. If they get in an accident, they are at work. The accident might cause them to miss an important deadline, or they may be exhausted from a long day on the road. Fortunately, there are safety rules in place to help truck drivers act responsibly and avoid driving while they are tired, but those rules do not always get followed. If you get into an accident with a tractor trailer, remember that the person who is driving the truck might not even own it, so there are likely to be other parties besides the drivers involved in your trucking accident case.

Not only are the parties in trucking accident cases different and more numerous than the parties in accident cases involving only cars, they vehicles themselves are different. Eighteen-wheelers are enormous, and they are heavy. They handle differently when they are loaded than they do when they are not. They have moving parts. Eighteen-wheelers are longer and taller than other vehicles on the road. They are also much heavier. The exact weight of a trailer truck varies depending upon the weight of its cargo, but many of them weigh nearly eighty thousand pounds. Because tractor trailers are big and heavy and they maneuver differently than cars do, the physical occurrence of an accident involving a tractor trailer is much different than a wreck of only passenger vehicles.

Barrett Law PLLC:   Caring Support for Victims of Mississippi Trucking Accidents

The differences between tractor trailer accidents and passenger vehicle accidents can make pursuing resolution of your claim for damages difficult and complicated. Trucking accident cases can also involve various state and Federal laws that do not apply to passenger vehicle crashes. Accident victims who were in a wreck involving a tractor-trailer need the specialized knowledge and support of a Mississippi Trucking Accident Attorney. Attorneys who understand trucking accident cases know exactly how to get and interpret evidence and business records which are needed to successfully resolve your trucking accident claim. If you would like to learn more about how Mississippi trucking accident victims can file a claim for damages, call the Mississippi Trucking Accident Attorney at Barrett Law PLLC, at 1 (800) 707-9577 today.