Truck claims here frequently escalate because the traffic mix is unforgiving—local drivers, out-of-town travelers headed to the coast, and commercial vehicles all sharing the same choke points. A crash that starts as “a lane change” can quickly become a multi-vehicle chain reaction.
In Brunswick, we also see cases where the initial story doesn’t hold up once evidence is reviewed. For example:
- A driver blames rain or glare, but speed and following distance don’t match conditions.
- A company claims the truck was “properly maintained,” but service records show delays or repeat issues.
- A driver says they were fully alert, but hours-of-service documentation suggests fatigue.
Because trucking companies often move quickly after a serious wreck, the early days matter. The sooner you get legal guidance, the easier it is to preserve the information that tends to “disappear.”


