- Call For A Free Consultation (877) 792-4529
Downey’s geography places it at the crossroads of three major commercial freight freeways. The I-710 Long Beach Freeway – the primary port-to-inland freight artery for the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach container complex – runs along Downey’s western edge. The I-5 Santa Ana Freeway borders Downey to the east and carries substantial commercial truck volume between Southern California and points north and south. The I-105 Century Freeway cuts through the city’s southern portion, connecting both. Commercial trucks are a constant presence on Downey’s roads – and when they are involved in collisions, the results are almost always serious.
The Law Offices of Asher Hoffman represents people injured in commercial truck accidents in Downey and throughout the Gateway Cities and Southeast Los Angeles County corridor. These cases require an immediate, expert response – we provide it on full contingency, with no upfront cost.
Contact us for a free consultation.
A fully loaded semi-truck can weigh up to 80,000 pounds under federal law – approximately 20 times the weight of an average passenger car. At freeway speeds, the kinetic energy involved in a truck-versus-car collision is catastrophic for the smaller vehicle. Downey’s position on the I-710 freight corridor means that the trucks its residents share roads with include container trucks, flatbed rigs, tanker vehicles, and refrigerator units – some of the largest and heaviest commercial vehicles on California’s highways.
PIH Health Hospital Downey (11500 Brookshire Ave) provides emergency care for Downey accident victims. For Level I trauma, LAC+USC Medical Center (2051 Marengo St, Los Angeles) is the regional resource.
CCP section 335.1 gives you two years to file a personal injury lawsuit. Government Code section 911.2 requires a six-month government claim if a public entity’s road condition contributed to the crash.
The carrier/independent contractor distinction matters for vicarious liability but does not eliminate all carrier exposure. Motor carriers have direct duties under the FMCSA regardless of employment classification. California’s AB 5 and related independent contractor rules also create additional pathways to establish carrier liability. We analyze the specific relationship between the driver and carrier in every case.
The sooner the better. ELD data, GPS records, dashcam footage, and pre-trip inspection logs are not kept indefinitely. We send preservation demands the same day we are retained.
Settlement values vary widely based on injury severity, available insurance, carrier negligence, and many other factors. Cases involving severe injuries and substantial carrier insurance – common in the commercial trucking context – can settle in the hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars. We provide a frank case evaluation based on your specific facts.
Every commercial motor carrier operating in interstate commerce has a publicly accessible FMCSA safety rating. Carriers with conditional or unsatisfactory ratings, or those with a history of out-of-service orders for brake or tire violations, face enhanced liability exposure when those violations contribute to a crash. We pull carrier safety records as part of our initial case investigation and use a history of violations to support claims for punitive damages where the carrier’s conduct was reckless.
The FMCSA’s Safety Measurement System (SMS) database allows us to identify carriers with patterns of hours-of-service violations, maintenance failures, and driver qualification problems. A carrier that received multiple out-of-service orders in the months before your crash and continued operating without correcting the deficiencies has demonstrated the reckless disregard that supports punitive damages under California Civil Code section 3294.
Many truck crashes in Downey involve freight originating from or destined for the port complex. This freight chain involves multiple parties: the ocean carrier, the terminal operator, the drayage company, the truck driver, the chassis provider, and the cargo shipper. When a port-related truck crash occurs, we investigate the entire chain for liability – particularly where chassis defects, improper container loading, or weight limit violations contributed to the crash. Port-adjacent truck accident cases can involve liability distributed across multiple parties with separate insurance programs.
You can still pursue claims against the motor carrier. The carrier’s liability for a deceased driver’s negligence does not end with the driver’s death. We have pursued and successfully resolved trucking cases where the driver did not survive.
If you were injured in a truck crash while performing work duties, you have both a workers’ comp claim and a potential third-party personal injury claim against the truck driver and carrier. Workers’ comp covers your medical expenses and partial lost wages; the personal injury claim can recover the full damages the workers’ comp system does not address.
From the moment we are retained in a Downey truck accident case, we move on multiple fronts simultaneously. We send litigation holds to the carrier and any other responsible parties, demanding preservation of all records. We pull the accident report from Downey PD or CHP and begin identifying witnesses. We obtain the carrier’s FMCSA safety record. We coordinate with our client’s treating physicians to ensure injuries are properly documented. And we begin the process of building the demand package that will drive settlement negotiations.
Throughout the representation, we keep our client informed about case progress, realistic settlement range, and the litigation timeline if a suit is filed. We do not keep clients in the dark and we do not make decisions about their case without consulting them. Every significant step – accepting a settlement offer, filing suit, moving toward trial – is made with our client’s informed consent.
A commercial truck accident lawsuit in Downey follows the standard Los Angeles County civil litigation timeline. After filing the complaint, we serve the carrier and other defendants, who typically have 30 days to respond. Discovery then begins: written interrogatories, document requests, and depositions of the truck driver, the carrier’s safety manager, and any relevant expert witnesses. Most truck cases have a trial date set 18-24 months after filing, but the large majority settle before that date once discovery is substantially complete and both sides have assessed the evidence. We give clients realistic timeline expectations from the beginning and update them as the case progresses.
For all personal injury services in Downey, see our Downey Personal Injury Lawyer hub page.