Jury in Fatal Florida Semi Truck Accident on I-75 Finds Drivers & Police Negligent
The attorney representing a woman injured in a fatal Florida semi-truck crash is asking the courts to reconsider the case.
The fiery commercial truck accident involving two semi trucks -- one transporting potato chips for Frito-Lay and another carrying hot dog meat -- occurred Oct. 12, 2007, at the U.S. 441 exit off I-75 in Alachua, Florida, around 7 a.m. According to news reports, the Florida Highway Patrol had ordered traffic diverted off interstate 75 southbound due to an earlier accident in Gainesville. I-75 begins near Miami, Florida and ends at the Georgia state line.
Alachua Police were directing traffic when the accident between the two semitrucks and a van transporting employees to the V.A. Medical Center in Gainsville occurred. Reports state that the Frito-Lay semi-truck slammed into the rear of the semi carrying hot dog meat, forcing it into the van. The Frito-Lay truck driver was killed in this Florida highway traffic accident.
A Florida attorney representing a woman in the van who suffered personal injury objects to the jury's findings, which split negligence across four parties: the Alachua Police Dept. (35% negligent), the deceased Frito-Lay truck driver (15% negligent), the van driver (35% negligent), and the hot dog meat semitruck driver (15% negligent). No monetary compensation was awarded in this case. The lawyer for the injured woman asserted that the deceased truck driver had a history of hypertension and traffic violations, and that the trucking company should have been held accountable for full damages.
Florida truck accident lawyers have experience and knowledge in the areas of personal injury law and liability, in complex cases like these involving multiple drivers and entities. The attorney representing the woman injured in this accident has scheduled an October 2 date asking for the case to be reconsidered. He would like to see charges against the Alachua Police Dept. dropped, as they were not named a defendant in the original lawsuit in Florida. He alleges that assigning a percent of negligence to parties not named in the original lawsuit is a tactic used by trucking companies to avoid paying full damages. His client had filed a lawsuit against FL Transportation Inc., which maintained the Frito-Lay Orlando Traffic Center where the deceased potato chip semi-truck driver was headed.
Attorney wants ruling against Alachua Police Department dropped
The North Florida Herald, Sept. 17, 2009
Jury finds Alachua police, others negligent in crash
Gainsville.com Sept. 4, 2009
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