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Archive for May, 2009
Fatal Crash on 110 Freeway Leaves Teen Dead on Prom Night
16-year-old Jennifer Perla, was on her way to the prom last night when the SUV she was traveling in rolled over on the Southbound 110 freeway. Perla who is from Encino, was ejected from the car and died at the scene of the crash.
Perla, a softmore at Taft High School in Encino was headed to the California Science Center near downtown Los Angeles, where the prom was being held.
Perla was among eight total passengers traveling in the SUV. The other seven were taken to nearby LAC USC County Medical Center and are expected to survive. Preliminary reports suggest that the driver of the SUV made an unsafe lane change that caused the car to overturn and rollover.
If you have been seriously injured or have lost a loved one in an SUV rollover crash, call immediately and speak with a lawyer about your legal rights. Don’t delay or guess about whether you have a claim or not. Call now – 310.882.6810 – Read about passenger’s rights laws in California.
For more information about rollover accidents and liability, browse through our website using the search feature.
Car Crashes into Huntington Beach Preschool; Children Injured
On Thursday Morning just before 8:00am, a car driven by Andrea Moyers crashed into Huntington Beach preschool injuring five children. The injured children were between the ages of three and four-years-old and were taken to a local hospital for treatment. Moyers is the mother of one of the children enrolled at the preschool.
The cause of the accident is still under investigation and it is not clear what caused the car to jump the curb and crash into the preschool. All of the children are expected to survive.
Mike Tyson’s Daughter in Critical Condition
In a tragic event that no parent should ever experience, Exodus Tyson, age 4 is in critical condition after being choked by what appears to be cord hanging from their treadmill. The incident took place at their Arizona home. Mike Tyson was in Las Vegas when the incident occurred and flew home immediately after hearing of his daughters injuries. Exodus Tyson was found by her mother, who called 911. Exodus is currently in critical condition on life support.
There are many dangerous products on the market today. Product liability cases often result in tragic and catastrophic injuries. Corporations must be held accountable for manufacturing and putting dangerous products on the market. If you or a loved one has been injured by a dangerous product, call now for a free legal consultation. 888.222.8286
Catastrophic Injury Claims – Know Your Legal Rights in California
Suppose you’re driving to work or to the grocery store one day, a drive you’ve made hundreds of times without incident. But this day, as you are crossing an intersection on a green light, a car coming from the side doesn’t see the red light and broadsides you at a high-rate of speed. As a result of the accident, you suffer a fracture in your neck, paralyzing you from the neck down. In seconds, you go from being an active, healthy, happy independent person to an immobile person who is incapable of caring for even your most basic needs and are dependent on others for all of your needs. Catastrophic injuries such as quadriplegia are sudden and unexpected life changing for the victim and the victim’s family. A healthy person may suddenly become a quadriplegic or paraplegic from a spine injury in an automobile accident caused by the carelessness or inattentiveness of another driver.
Depending on the type and nature of the injury, in some cases prompt medical treatment can result in significant recovery. Most catastrophic injuries, however, tend to be devastating and permanent in nature. “Catastrophic” generally refers to injuries that require significant medical treatment and have long-term and permanent effects on an injured victim’s life. These injuries usually happen suddenly and without warning. Catastrophic injuries generally require intensive and long-term medical care and usually result in permanent changes to the victim’s life. The victim may be disabled and unable to go back to work and will have to be retrained for a new job or profession, if he or she is able to return to work at all. The victim may suffer severe physical, emotional, and mental pain and suffering, be more susceptible to bacterial and viral diseases due to a weakened immune system, and may have a significantly shortened life span.
Catastrophic injuries include:
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Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
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Quadriplegia (also known as tetraplegia)
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Severe scarring and disfigurement
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Loss of vision in one or both eyes
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Multiple fractures
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Injuries to the nerves in the torso, arms, and shoulders (brachial plexus)
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Neurological disorders
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Reflex sympathetic dystrophy, also known as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), a syndrome that causes chronic pain, usually involving one or more of the victim’s limbs
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Serious emotional and psychological injuries
A catastrophic injury frequently causes disruption to the Central Nervous System (CNS), which in turn affects many of the systems of the body. The catastrophic injury may result in loss of movement, sensation, and communicative and cognitive abilities. It may also impact respiration, circulation, the skin, the urinary system, the gastrointestinal system, and other body systems. Management of a catastrophic injury is complex and requires the expertise of a team of health care providers, including physicians, specialists, consultants, nurses, psychiatrists, psychotherapists, and social workers.
In some catastrophic injuries, the victim will need to have surgeries in the future. The clearest example of this is the victim who has been severely burned over a large part of his or her body. Such a victim will have to go through a series of surgeries over the years. An attorney experienced in catastrophic injuries will recognize the need for medical care in the future and will be able to recover monetary damages for the future surgeries and pain and suffering associated with them.
The attorney will also be able to recover all other damages to which the victim is entitled, including past, present, and future medical expenses, lost past, present, and future wages, loss of earning power, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, psychological injuries, and any and all other damages the victim is legally entitled to receive. A catastrophic injury often requires major and expensive lifetime care and an experienced attorney will work on your behalf to get you maximum recovery.
Victims with catastrophic injuries often suffer long-term or permanent disabilities. They may have to deal with incontinence, loss of feelings in their limbs, loss of bladder control, inability to breathe independently (requiring an artificial respirator at all times), loss of memory, inability to speak, blindness paralysis, and loss of communicative and cognitive abilities. These disabilities may shorten the victim’s life, as well as present him or her with ongoing medical problems, physical pain, and mental suffering.
Catastrophic injuries are also life altering for the victim’s family members, who may have to adjust their priorities and work to care for their loved one. The spouse of a traumatic injury victim may be able to bring his or her own lawsuit to recover damages for loss of consortium (loss or impairment of sexual relations), care, and comfort due to his or her spouse’s injuries.
International Aircraft Accidents – Plane Crash in Foreign Countries
Because commercial airliners that are in the business of international flights offer to the general public to carry goods or persons and are bound to accept anyone who offers to pay the “price of carriage” subject to seating availability, they are considered by law to be “common carriers.” As a common carrier, an airliner is required to use the “utmost due care and diligence” for the safe passage of and to prevent injuries to its passengers and can be held financially responsible (“liable”) for injuries resulting from even its slightest carelessness (“negligence”). Commercial airlines providing international service are bound to do all that human care, vigilance, and foresight that they can reasonably do under the circumstances. However, as to other planes and persons who are not passengers, the airliner owes them only the ordinary standard of care.
The starting point for a discussion of liability for personal injuries and deaths involving international flights is the Warsaw Convention treaty, which took place in 1929 and was the applicable law until the Montreal Convention of 1999. Article 17 of the Warsaw Convention governed the liability of international air carriers for accidents in which a passenger was injured (“wounded”) or killed on an international flight. Article 22 created monetary liability limits on damage awards against an international airline. Under the Warsaw Convention of 1929, the airlines agreed to limit their liability to about $8,300. The Warsaw Convention was amended by the Hague Protocol and then again in 1975 by the Montreal Agreement to provide compensation of a maximum of $75,000 per passenger for passengers who were injured or killed on an international flight. This amount was paid to the injured victim or his or her next of kin without the passenger (or his or her heirs) having to prove negligence or other fault on the part of the airline or its employees.
One of the major problems with the Warsaw Convention was that $75,000 was frequently insufficient to fairly compensate the victim or his or her next of kin for their injuries or loss. However, the only way the injured person or his or her heirs could avoid this monetary limitation of $75,000 was by proving that the airline, through its employees, acted deliberately (“willful misconduct”) in causing the passenger’s injuries or death, an admittedly difficult standard that rarely succeeded. The Warsaw Convention also prevented victims from suing the airlines for punitive damages regardless of how reckless, gross, or deliberate the misconduct of the airline’s employees was.
The Warsaw Convention often led to grossly unfair outcomes. For example, suppose two people are on an airliner traveling from Los Angeles to New York when it crashes and they are killed. One of the passengers’ final destination was New York. The other passenger, however, was flying to London, so the New York stop was simply a stopover to refuel the plane and pick up more passengers going to London. In this case, the amount of monetary damages the heirs of the two passengers would be greatly different if the aircraft crashed between Los Angeles and New York. As to the passenger whose end destination was New York, there would be no limit on the amount of damages his or her next of kin could recover. For instance, they could receive an award in the millions. However, as to the passenger whose end destination was London, the Warsaw Convention and the Montreal Agreement applied to limit the amount of damages his or her heirs could recover to $75,000.
Recognizing that the liability limits of the Warsaw Convention and subsequent amendments thereto were inadequate in most countries to fully compensate the victims of an international aircraft accident, the Montreal Convention of 1999—formally known as the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules for International Carriage by Air, May 28, 1999—was entered into and took force on November 4, 2003. The Montreal Convention of 1999 is the product of a United Nations effort to reform the Warsaw Convention so as to “harmonize the hodgepodge of supplementary amendments and intercarrier agreements of which the Warsaw Convention system of liability consists.” As of December 2008, there are 87 signatories to the Montreal Convention, among them almost all countries of major importance in international air transportation. Signatory countries include the United States, European Union (EU), Canada, China, Japan, Korea, and Mexico.
The Montreal Convention of 1999 does not simply amend the Warsaw Convention and its various amendments; it replaces them. Thus, the Montreal Convention is the treaty exclusively governing the rights and liabilities of passengers and carriers in international air transportation. However, because of the similarity of many provisions of the Montreal Convention with the Warsaw Convention, the case law regarding a particular provision of the Warsaw Convention treaty applies with equal force regarding its counterpart in the Montreal Convention treaty.
The Montreal Convention unifies and replaces the system of liability that derived from the Warsaw Convention and its amendments, explicitly recognizing the importance of ensuring protection of the interests of consumers in international carriage by air and the need for equitable compensation based on the principle of restitution. Even though the Montreal Convention is more consumer-friendly than its predecessor, it does not alter the original goal of the Warsaw Convention of maintaining limited and predictable damage amounts for airlines.
The Montreal Convention of 1999 applies to “all international carriage of persons, baggage or cargo performed by aircraft for reward.” International carriage is defined as any carriage where the place of departure and the place of destination are either (1) situated within the territories of two State Parties, or (2) within the territory of a single State Party if there is an agreed stopping place within the territory of another State, even if that State is not a State Party. The Montreal Convention applies to all actions for damages arising in the carriage of passengers, baggage, and cargo, however such claims may be founded.
Article 17(1) of the Montreal Convention states: “The carrier is liable for damages sustained in case of death or bodily injury of a passenger upon condition only that the accident which caused the death or injury took place on board the aircraft or in the course of any of the operations of embarking or disembarking.” Liability under Article 17(1) arises only if a passenger’s injury “is caused by an unexpected or unusual event or happening that is external to the passenger,” and is not due to “the passenger’s own internal reaction to the usual, normal, and expected operation of the accident.” The United States Supreme Court has noted that this definition “should be flexibly applied after assessment of all the circumstances surrounding a passenger’s injuries.” The courts have held that the risk of developing deep vein thrombosis (DVT) during a flight is not an “accident” within the meaning of Article 17, and that an airline’s failure to warn about the risk of DVT is not an “event” within the meaning of the Supreme Court’s definition of an “accident.”
The Montreal Convention of 1999 provides that a “carrier is liable for damages sustained in case of death or bodily injury.” The Montreal Convention creates a two-tiered system of compensation. First, it imposes absolute liability on an international carrier to the extent of 100,000 “Special Drawing Rights” (SDRs) (providing the plaintiff can prove damages up to that amount). SDRs are a type of international monetary reserve currency or accounting system created in 1968 by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which is a specialized agency of the United Nations that determines the value of SDRs relative to the currencies of the five largest exporting nations. The value of an SDR is published everyday by the IMF. As of April 15, 2009, 100,000 SDRs are the equivalent of about $148,500 United States dollars.
For claims for monetary damages in excess of $148,500 (100,000 SDRs on April 15, 2009), there is a presumption that the airline was at fault (“negligent”) in some way, and the airline is permitted to raise any defenses it may have, including the fault of the passenger (“comparative negligence”). Comparative negligence is carelessness on the part of the injured or deceased victim that caused or contributed to his or her injuries or death.
Both the Montreal Convention and the Warsaw Convention before it speak of compensation for “bodily injury.” But what of the passenger who survives an international flight accident, yet suffers serious mental disorders? The Montreal Convention, like the Warsaw Convention, is silent on the right of a passenger to recover damages for emotional and mental injuries and has left the issue to the courts to resolve. The courts have taken the position that, as for mental and psychological injuries, they are recoverable only where they are caused by the bodily injury the passenger sustained. Damages for emotional distress and mental and psychological injuries that merely accompany the bodily injury, but are not caused by the bodily injury, are not recoverable.
In cases of aircraft accidents, the Montreal Convention of 1999 requires the airline to provide, without delay, advance payments to assist designated persons in meeting immediate economic needs. The amount of this initial payment will be subject to national law and will be deductible from the final settlement award. The Montreal Convention of 1999 also increases the air carrier’s liability limits in the event of delay, and in the event of damage caused to baggage (delay, damage, or loss).
Under the Warsaw Convention, an injured passenger or the next-of-kin of a deceased passenger could traditionally file suit in one of four possible places (“venues”): (1) the country where the passenger bought the ticket, (2) the country of the passenger’s final destination, (3) the country where the airline is incorporated, or (4) the country where the airline maintains its principal place of business. The Montreal Convention of 1999 added another site where the injured passenger or next-of-kin of a deceased passenger can bring suit: in the state where the passenger had his or her principal and permanent residence (his or her “domicile”). Domicile has been defined as the place where a person has his or her true fixed home and principal establishment, and to which, whenever he or she is absent, he or she has the intention of returning
Note that the Montreal Convention and its predecessors (the Warsaw Convention, Prague Protocol, Montreal Agreement, and other agreements) apply only to the airlines. It does not apply to others who may have caused the victim’s injuries or death, such as the manufacturer of the airliner or the maker of component parts or systems installed in the aircraft. Airports, private maintenance companies, or other service providers cannot reap the benefits of the Warsaw Convention unless they are found to be performing the airline’s functions under the Warsaw Convention. The United States government can be held liable for the carelessness (“negligence”) of its Air Traffic Controllers, so long as the ATC is involved in non-policymaking and non-discretionary functions.
If a plane does down in the “territorial waters” of the United States, the deceased victim’s next of kin are entitled to be compensated for all of their losses. The territorial waters of the United States extend for 12 miles from land. For international flights that crash into the ocean beyond the 12-mile limit (the “high seas”), the law that is applied is that of the Death on the High Seas Act (DOHSA). Before 2000, the DOHSA permitted the designated persons to recover damages only for their “pecuniary” or “economic” losses, such as lost wages and support of the deceased victim. Since 2000, however, the victim’s heirs have been able to recover damages for “non-pecuniary” or “non-economic” losses, such as loss of care, comfort, and society. However, the United States Supreme Court has ruled that the relatives of a decedent killed in an aircraft accident on the high seas may not bring a survival action to compensate the deceased passenger for pre-death pain and suffering.
If you have been injured or a loved one killed in an accident involving an international commercial aircraft, you should contact an experienced personal injury law firm as soon as possible. Although the National Traffic Safety Board (NTSB) usually conducts a thorough investigation of an aircraft accident for aircraft accidents in the United States, it may take many months—sometimes as much as a year or more—for the NTSB to release its findings, conclusions, and recommendations. The law firm may want to send its own investigator to the scene of the accident to inspect and take pictures of the accident site and any dangerous condition that caused or contributed to the accident, especially before the airliner changes the condition. The attorney or his or her investigator will also want to talk to any witnesses to the accident while the facts are still fresh in their minds.
When an international commercial aircraft crashes, causing a loss of life or serious injuries, the airliner and its insurance company will usually contact the next of kin immediately and provide immediate grief support. The airliner will often pay for the hotel costs of a deceased passenger’s next of kin and help make and pay for funeral arrangements. The airliner or its insurance company will frequently tell the survivors that there is no need for them to obtain a lawyer to represent them, as they will do right by them. The insurance company may offer to pay what appears to the uninitiated and inexperienced family to be a fair settlement. Do not accept any settlement offer from an insurance company without the advice of a skilled and experience aviation accident lawyer.
Before you sign any document given to you by the airline company, read it carefully before signing and if you have any questions about what it means, take it to an experienced personal injury lawyer. The grieving family is susceptible to accepting a much lower offer than an experienced aviation lawyer can get for them. Although the airliner or its insurance company will try to dissuade you from getting a lawyer saying that a lawyer’s fee will come out of your share, the truth is that studies consistently show that victims of accidents end up with more money in their pockets even after paying the lawyer his or her fee.
An experienced personal injury law firm can also help with seeing to it that you obtain appropriate and thorough medical care for your physical, emotional, and psychological injuries suffered as a result of the accident. They can also do everything possible to ensure that you obtain full compensation for your medical expenses, pain and suffering, mental anguish, property damage, lost wages, psychological injuries, loss of society and comfort (“loss of consortium”), and all of your other injuries and damages.
Visit our Aviation Law Page for more information on International Plane Crashes or call today and talk to a lawyer for a free consultation 888.222.8286
Accidents Involving Teen Drivers
In 2005, motor vehicle crashes were the leading cause of death for United States teens, accounting for more than one in three deaths in this age group. In 2003, 12 teens ages 16 to 19 died every day from a motor vehicle accident. In the United States during 2005, 4,544 teens ages 16 to 19 years old died of injuries caused in motor vehicle crashes. Nearly 400,000 motor vehicle occupants (drivers and passengers) sustained nonfatal injuries that required a trip to the emergency department. Overall, in 2005, teenagers accounted for ten percent of the United States population and 12 percent of motor vehicle crash deaths. Young peole ages 15-24 account for about 10 percent of the U.S. population and 12 percent of motor vehicle crash deaths.
While deadly crashes involving teen drivers is down thanks to California’s “Graduated Driving Law,” (discussed below) teen drivers still kill approximately as many other occupants in another vehicle or pedestrians. According to AAA, the majority of people killed in teen driver crashes continue to be other than the teen drivers themselves. The analysis shows that about one-third of people killed in crashes involving drivers ages 15 to 17 are teen drivers themselves, while nearly two-thirds are passengers, occupants of other vehicles, cyclists, pedestrians, and other road users. According to AAA President and CEO Robert L. Darbelnet, “For every teen driver killed in a crash, almost twice as many other people die, which underscores the link between teen driver safety and the safety of everyone on the road.”
Statistics don’t lie: teenage drivers get into more automobile accidents than any other age group. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and government statistics, 62 percent of teenage passenger deaths in 2004 occurred in crashes in which another teenager was driving. Teen passengers tend to distract young drivers, as well as encourage risky driving behavior, such as excessive speeding, not wearing seat belts, and racing other cars.
Teen drivers are in a higher proportion of crashes than expected, given their relatively small percentage of the entire driving population. According to the Automobile Club of Southern California, teen fatal crashes occur far more frequently during late night hours than expected, given their relatively limited nighttime driving. Teen passengers are at a far greater risk of being injured or killed in vehicles driven by other teen drivers than in vehicles driven by older, more experienced drivers.
The traffic accident rates for 16- 19-year-old drivers are higher than those for any other age group. Causes include the inability to detect driving hazards; the tendency of young drivers to underestimate the crash risk in hazardous situations and overestimate their ability to avoid the threats they identify; risk taking, such as speeding, tailgating, running red lights, making illegal turns, passing dangerously; failure to yield to pedestrians; not wearing seat belts; and drinking.
In 2005, nearly three out of every ten teens reported that, in the previous month, they had ridden with a driver who had been drinking. One in ten reported having driven after drinking alcohol within the same one-month period. Despite these figures, according to a report of the Accident Analysis and Prevention, the number one cause of traffic crashes involving young drivers are caused by inexperience or distraction, not “thrill seeking” or deliberate risk taking.
Other causes of teen driver accidents are talking on the cell phone or texting. California prohibits the use of hand-held cell phones. However, studies have shown that talking on a hands-free cell phone is just as dangerous as talking into a hand-held cell phones, as it distracts the driver from the road ahead of him or her. As for texting, that involves considerable distraction from driving and has been banned in many states, including California.
The risk of getting into an automobile accident are particularly high during the first year that the teen is eligible to drive. Among teen drivers, the motor vehicle death rate for male drivers and passengers ages 16 to 19 was more than one and a half times that of their female counterpoints. The presence of teen passengers increases the crash risk of unsupervised drivers. This risk increases with the number of teen passengers.
In the first year of driving, one in every five 16-year-old drivers has an accident. One-third of all crashes are at intersections. Two-thirds of teen passenger deaths are in vehicles driven by other teens. Over one-third of teen fatal crashes are speed related. A 16-year-old is 20 times more likely to be killed in a crash than an adult. The risk of a fatal crash is three times greater at night, for every mile driven. Underage drinking and drug use is illegal and impairs the young driver. Among male drivers between 15 and 20 years of age who were involved in fatal crashes in 2005, 38 percent were speeding at the time of the crash and 24 percent had been drinking. In 2005, 23 percent of drivers ages 15 to 20 who died in motor vehicle crashes had a blood alcohol content (BAC) of .08 or higher.
Studies have show that, rather than give a 16-year-old an unlimited right to drive a car, it cuts the numbers of crashes, deaths, and injuries by using a “graduated driving license.” (“GDL”). Effective January 1, 2006, California has a graduated driving license program. Research indicates that the most comprehensive graduated drivers licensing programs are associated with a reduction of 38 percent to 40 percent in fatal and injury crashes, respectively, among 16-year-old drivers.
Under California’s GDL, a person aged 15 ½ to 17 ½ must take a course in driver’s education, apply for a provisional permit for at least six months before getting a license, take a course in driver’s training, and can then apply for an unlimited Class C driver’s license when he or she turns 18. During the time the teen has a provisional permit, the teen must log 50 hours of adult-supervised driving practice by an adult at least 25 years old, ten hours of which must occur during darkness. The adult must sit close enough to the teen driver to take control of the vehicle if necessary. If a person is 18 or older, he or she can apply for a Class C driver’s license any time he or she feels prepared to drive, without having to fulfill the requirements of taking a driver’s education course, having a provisional permit, or taking a driver’s training course. Of course, he or she will still have to take and pass the written exam and driving test.
For the first year after obtaining his or her provisional driver’s license, or until he or she turns 18, whichever happens first, a person under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a parent/guardian or other person specified by law (generally a person at least 25 years old) when transporting passengers under 20 years of age at any time of the day or night. The fatality risk of drivers aged 16-17 years old is 3.6 times higher when they are driving with teen passengers than when driving alone. A teen driver with a provisional driver’s license cannot drive between the hours of 11:00 p.m. and 5:00 a.m. The reason for the nighttime driving restriction is statistics show that citations/serious accidents involving provisional drivers during the 9:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. have dramatically increased over the past five years.
A teen with a job that requires him or her to drive between the hours of 11:00 p.m. and 5:00 a.m. may drive to get to and from work, providing reasonable transportation facilities are inadequate and the driver carries a statement signed by the employer verifying your employment and indicating the date your employment is expected to end. There are several other exceptions to the prohibitions on the hours the teen cannot drive, such as a medical necessity, schooling or school-related activities, necessity of a family member (including yourself), or if you are an emancipated minor (you have filed documents with the DMV to show that you are emancipated and have filed either an SR-1P or SR-22 as required by law). It is a good idea to carry proof of your emancipated status with you when you are driving.
The California Vehicle Code does not allow a provisional driver you to drive in the event of an emergency. It is left to the discretion of the law enforcement officer to determine if he or she will cite the teen driver for violating his or her provisional license requirements and limitations.
Because of the new laws, at-fault and injury collisions involving 16-year-old drivers declined a substantial 24 percent over the law’s first two years. Teen passenger deaths and injuries from crashes of 16-year-old drivers dropped an astounding 40 percent over the law’s first two years.
Just like adult drivers, teen drivers must carry proof of insurance. They are required to have insurance that provides at a minimum $15,000 for injury to or death of one person, to a total of $30,000 for all persons hurts, and $5,000 for property damage for each accident. The teen driver must carry proof of insurance (usually a card issued by the teen’s insurance company) at all times while operating a motor vehicles.
One question you’re probably asking youself is, how soon after you’ve been injured or a loved one killed by a teenage or young driver should you hire a law firm to represent you? If you have been seriously injured—or a loved one has been killed—in an accident involving a teen or young driver, you should retain a lawyer as soon as possible. The insurance company will assign an adjuster to the case as soon as it is reported to the insurance company and usually the adjuster will want to take your statement as soon as possible. Do not give the adjuster a statement until you have talked with—and preferably retained—an experienced personal injury lawyer. The adjuster is trained to ask questions that are biased in favor of the insurance company and designed to trip you up. You should never give a statement to an insurance company adjuster or other representative without the consent and presence of your attorney.
You should also contact an experienced personal injury law firm as soon as possible, as the law firm may want to send its own investigators to the scene of the accident to inspect and take pictures of the vehicles, the accident site, and any dangerous condition that caused or contributed to the accident, especially before there is a change in the condition of the area or vehicle. The attorney or his or her investigator will also want to talk to any witnesses to the accident as soon as possible while the facts are still fresh in their minds. Again, we cannot stress it too much: Do not speak to the other party’s insurance adjuster until you have retained your own lawyer to advise you.
Call now for a free consultation with a lawyer 888.222.8286
California Consumer Protection Legislation: AB 496 Tire Disclosure
Tire-related accidents are an extremely common and cause serious and catastrophic injuries. Assembly Bill 496 by Assemblymember Mike Davis (D-Los Angeles) requires tire dealers to disclose the age of a tire before selling it. The bill, is formally named Tire age degradation: consumer disclosure would require tire leaders to notify purchasers of the age and risks of purchasing tires before selling them to the buyer.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration declared “tire aging a serious safety issue.” In fact, 84% of tire-related accidents involve tires that were at least six years old. Adhesives and rubber used to make tires silently and invisibly degrade over time, greatly increasing the chances of tread separation. But because this danger is unseen, most consumers don’t know about it until it’s too late. Just like tow truck driver Ramon Moreno. Moreno listened to a tire dealer when he recommended using the spare tire that came with his 12-year-old Ford Explorer. But even though the tire looked safe, it was anything but. The tread separated, causing a devastating accident. Although all the occupants where wearing seat belts, his 10-year-old cousin died. AB 496 is supported by ASFCME, Safety Research & Strategies, Inc. and Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety (CARS). At a recent press conference, Moreno pleaded with law makers to pass AB 496 bill and “save other people’s lives.”
Please pass this important legislation.
Visit our Tire Blowout and Defective Tires page for more information
Major Accident in Anaheim Hills Shuts Down Intersection
This afternoon, a 5-car accident at the intersection of Santa Ana Canyon Road and Imperial, caused major damage to all vehicles as well as injuries to six individuals. Police shut down the intersection causing major traffic and delays.
Of all the serious impacts in this crash, a white dump truck may have caused this crash by entering into the intersection against a red light. The dump truck crushed a white Toyota Camry and collided with the other three vehicles. The driver of Toyota Camry has not yet been identified, but is expected to survive, and has suffered from non-life threatening injuries.
If you or a loved one have been involved in an auto accident in Orange County, call today and talk to a lawyer for free. Protect yourself and the rights of your loved ones. Dont’ delay, call now: 888.222.8286
Tire Failures:Defective Tires and Blowouts – Know Your Legal Rights
Tire blowouts remain one of the most devastating causes of wrongful death auto accidents on the roads. Below is a narrative that may help put this type of accident into prespective.
One day, Sue is driving her 14-year-old son to a baseball game in her Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV). She is traveling on the freeway at 65 miles per hour, when she hears a “boom” coming from the rear of her SUV. Within moments, she realizes that the right back tire has blown out. Her SUV starts to turn sideways. Sue tries to correct the sideways turning, but when she turns the steering wheel, the SUV over corrects and rolls over, seriously injuring Sue and killing her 14-year-old son. An investigation into the accident shows that it was the result of a tire failure, specifically separation of the tread. The tire is only a year old with 8,000 miles on it.
Since 2000, there are have been several major recalls of millions of tires. For instance, in the early 2000s, there were massive recalls of more than 15 million tires of several types of Bridgestone and Firestone tires (Bridgestone owns Firestone), especially those put on the Ford Explorer SUV, which resulted in a number of crashes, especially rollovers, killing and seriously injuring hundreds of motorists. For example, Firestone’s Wilderness AT tire lacked proper adhesion between the steel belts and the surrounding rubber. Firestone failed to use gum edge strips, nylon overlays or caps, or other safeguards to reduce the possibility of tread separation.
Causes of traffic injuries and deaths due to faulty tires include:
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Tread separation
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Tire failure
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Tire blowout
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Tire or rim explosion
Domestic and foreign manufacturers alike have made and marketed defective tires that have resulted in crashes, personal injuries, and wrongful deaths. However, tires made overseas (such as in China) may not be as safe as those made in the United States. Tires are not designed to last forever, even though you may drive only a few thousand of miles each year. Rubber degrades over time, and mechanics recommend that you put on new tires every five or six years even though there may be plenty of tread left on the tire.
When a tire is made, the base part of the tire is built first and then through various chemical and heating processes, steel belts are imbedded in the tire, and finally the tread is applied. Steel-belted radial tires are especially prone to tread separation. When the tread separates the driver may lose control of the vehicle, even when the tire does not lose pressure. Tread separation is usually due to some problem in the manufacturing process. The tire may be designed defectively or constructive carelessly. The manufacturer may use rubber that is too old and dry, miss warning signs during final inspection, use petroleum solvent before vulcanization, and cure moisture into the tire. Although tread separation usually occurs with a tire several years old being driven at a fairly fast speed, there have also been cases of brand new tires separating while being driven at slower speeds, such as 15 or 20 mph. Of course, the faster you are driving when you experience a tire failure due to tread separation or blowout, the more likely the chances that you will be seriously hurt or even killed.
When a radial tire loses its tread, the body (“carcass”) of the tire usually quickly experiences a blowout. The sudden loss of pressure in the tire makes it difficult for the driver to maintain control over the vehicle, and the vehicle may turn sideways. The sideways motion of the vehicle causes the bead of the tire to separate from the rim, causing the metal rim to dig into the asphalt or concrete surface of the roadway and pitch the car into a roll.
A report from the National Highway Safety Administration revealed that tread separations reduced the ability of drivers to control their vehicles, especially when the tire failure occurs on a rear tire at a high speed. The report also found that there is a much higher likelihood for death, injury, and crashes when the tread separation occurs on a SUV than on a pickup truck.
Underinflation of the tires can be a contributing factor in tread separation. Therefore, it is up to the car’s owner to see that the air pressure in the tires meets the manufacturer’s standards, which are normally found on the doorjamb of the driver’s door. Underinflation can occur by air escaping through the rubber, or leaks at interfaces of the tire with the wheel and valve stem.
You can avoid some tire failures by simply visually inspecting your tires once a month. Things to look for include cracking or cuts in the sidewalls; uneven treat wear; excessively worn tread; bulges or blisters; and excessive vibration while driving. An inexpensive tire-gauge can be purchased at your local auto store, and used every month to ensure that your pressure is within the manufacturer’s recommendation. Be sure to measure tire pressure when the tires are cold. Tires are considered cold if they have not been driven in the preceding three hours.
Also, underinflation of a tire means that the sidewall flexes more, making it more difficult to control the vehicle. A sidewall that flexes too much can also cause heat to build up excessively, which can shorten a tire’s life and possibly lead to a tread separation or blowout. Another incentive to and advantage of keeping your tire pressure at the manufacturer’s recommendations is that you will get optimal fuel mileage if you fill your tires to the manufacturer’s specifications.
Because a tire is a product, the law of strict products liability applies to cases involving injuries or deaths caused by a tire failure. It is not necessary to prove any specific act of carelessness (“negligence”) on the part of the manufacturer, distributor, or retailer. You need prove only that the tire was defective and that defect caused or contributed to your injuries or your loved one’s death.



