Truck Accidents · Fort Lauderdale

Fort Lauderdale truck accident lawyer.

A crash with an 80,000-pound truck is not a bigger car crash — it is a different case, run on federal rules that sit on top of Florida law. The evidence that wins it starts disappearing within days. Same-day response. No fee unless we recover for you.

  • 40+ yearsFlorida personal injury
  • $100M+ recoveredfor Florida accident victims
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Why a truck case is its own kind of case

A Fort Lauderdale truck accident lawyer fights a company, not just a driver.

When a tractor-trailer, dump truck, or box truck hits you, you are not up against one driver with a basic auto policy. You are up against a trucking company, its insurer, and the team they send to the scene — sometimes within hours — to start building a defense before you have left the hospital. As a Fort Lauderdale truck accident lawyer, Robert DiStefano works the case the same way: fast, documented, and aimed at every party that shares the blame.

The single most important thing to understand is that the proof in a truck case is perishable. The truck's electronic logging device records hours, speed, and braking, but that data can be overwritten on a set schedule. Driver-qualification files, drug-and-alcohol test results, dispatch records, and maintenance logs all sit in the company's hands — and a company under no legal pressure has little reason to keep them. That is why we send a formal preservation letter, sometimes called a spoliation letter, within days of taking your case.

If you were hurt, the order of operations is simple. Get medical care now, even if you feel okay — some of the worst truck-crash injuries hide for a day or two. Do not give the company's insurer a recorded statement. Keep every document and photo you have. Then call us so the preservation letter goes out before the evidence does.

The law that governs your truck case

Two rulebooks apply: Florida statutes and federal trucking regulations.

A car case runs on Florida law alone. A commercial-truck case adds a thick layer of federal safety rules — and a violation of those rules is often the cleanest proof of fault you can put in front of a jury. Here is what shapes your claim.

49 C.F.R. Parts 350–399 (FMCSA)

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Rules

Interstate trucks answer to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). These rules govern driver hours of service, logbooks and electronic logging device (ELD) data, driver qualification, drug-and-alcohol testing, vehicle inspection, and cargo securement. When a carrier breaks one of these rules — an over-hours driver, a skipped inspection, a missed drug test — that violation can establish negligence directly.

Fla. Stat. § 768.81 amended 2023

Modified Comparative Negligence

Effective March 24, 2023 (HB 837), Florida moved to a 51% bar. If you are found more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing; at 50% or less, your recovery is reduced by your share of fault. Trucking insurers push blame onto the injured driver hard — the ELD data and the company's own records are often what keep your fault percentage where it belongs.

Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a) amended 2023

Two-Year Statute of Limitations

Effective March 24, 2023 (HB 837), the deadline to file a negligence claim was cut from four years to two years. Wrongful death is two years from the date of death. Waiting also lets the truck's data and the company's files quietly age out. In a truck case the practical deadline to preserve proof is far shorter than the legal one.

Fla. Stat. § 627.736

Personal Injury Protection (PIP)

Your own $10,000 in Personal Injury Protection (PIP) pays first, regardless of fault — but you must get treatment within 14 days of the crash or you forfeit it. PIP rarely covers a serious truck-crash injury. Because your injuries cross Florida's permanent-injury threshold (Fla. Stat. § 627.737), the real recovery comes from the trucking company's far larger commercial policy.

This page provides general information about Florida law and is not legal advice. Statutes and case law change; your specific case requires a consultation.

More defendants, more proof, more coverage

In a truck case, the driver is rarely the only one who pays.

A car crash usually comes down to two drivers and two policies. A commercial-truck crash can involve a chain of companies — and each one may carry its own insurance. Finding every responsible party is how a truck claim reaches its real value.

Who can be held responsible

  • The driver — speeding, fatigue, distraction, impairment
  • The motor carrier — negligent hiring, training, or pushing illegal hours
  • The truck or trailer owner — when leased or owned separately
  • The maintenance provider — bad brakes, bald tires, ignored repairs
  • The shipper or loader — overloaded or unsecured cargo
  • A parts maker — defective tire, coupling, or brake component

The evidence that decides it

  • ELD / black-box data — hours, speed, hard braking
  • Driver-qualification file — license, medical card, history
  • Drug-and-alcohol test records — post-crash and prior
  • Maintenance & inspection logs — was the truck road-legal
  • Dispatch & bill-of-lading records — route, load, pressure to deliver
  • Onboard & dash camera footage — often deleted on a cycle

Why the money is different

  • Federal minimums — interstate freight carriers must carry far more coverage than a private car
  • Stacked policies — carrier, owner, and broker layers may apply
  • Serious injuries — truck crashes cause the catastrophic harm PIP can't touch
  • Corporate defendants — deeper pockets, but harder fights

The trucking company's team can be on the scene the day of the crash. The preservation letter is how we make sure they keep what they find — instead of losing it.

Where Broward truck crashes happen

Our freight corridors put cars and big rigs on the same pavement.

Broward County moves an enormous amount of freight, and most of it travels a handful of routes. If your crash happened on one of these, we know the road and the traffic patterns that caused it.

Interstate freight corridors

  • I-95 — the spine of Broward; high-speed rear-end and lane-change crashes with trucks at the Oakland Park, Sunrise, and Sample Road interchanges
  • I-595 — the main east-west truck route feeding the port and airport; heavy commercial volume
  • Florida's Turnpike — long-haul freight, toll-plaza slowdowns, and fatigued-driver crashes

Port & western Broward

  • Port Everglades — one of Florida's busiest cargo ports; container trucks and trailers on the connector roads all day
  • I-75 — western Broward; high-speed trucking and construction-zone crashes
  • Sawgrass Expressway — western feeder routes linking I-75 and the Turnpike to local freight

Patterns we see in truck cases

  • Blind-spot ("no-zone") sideswipes — lane changes where the trucker never saw you
  • Underride collisions — a car sliding under a trailer in stopped traffic
  • Jackknife & rollover — speed and brake failure on the interstates
  • Unsecured-load crashes — cargo or debris on the roadway

If your crash happened on any of these roads, we have handled cases on it. Call (954) 572-8000 and tell us where it happened.

Why DiStefano Law

Robert handles your truck case personally — and acts on the evidence fast.

The first move in a truck case is not a lawsuit. It is a preservation letter that goes out before the company's data and files can quietly disappear.

Forty years opposite the same insurers and defense firms in Broward courthouses means Robert knows how trucking carriers build a defense — and how to take it apart. You speak with Robert DiStefano directly, not a case manager. And it costs nothing up front: these injury cases are handled on contingency, no fee unless we recover for you.

Not a commercial-truck crash? We also handle everyday car accident claims and bus and limo cases. For all motor-vehicle matters, see related case results →

  1. 1

    Preserve the evidence

    We send the preservation letter within days — ELD data, driver-qualification file, drug-test records, maintenance and dispatch logs, and any onboard footage — so the company cannot let it age out.

  2. 2

    Identify every defendant

    Driver, motor carrier, truck or trailer owner, maintenance provider, shipper, and parts makers — we trace the chain and the insurance behind each one.

  3. 3

    Build the damages

    PIP coordination, permanent-injury documentation, future-care and lost-wage projections, and lien handling — a damages model the carrier has to take seriously.

  4. 4

    Demand, negotiate, try if needed

    Most cases resolve on a documented demand. When an offer undervalues your claim, Robert files and tries it — and the carriers know he will.

Truck accident questions

Straight answers, specific to commercial-truck cases.

How is a truck accident claim different from a car accident claim?
A car case usually involves two drivers and two ordinary auto policies under Florida law. A commercial-truck case adds a whole second rulebook: the federal motor-carrier safety regulations (49 C.F.R. Parts 350–399, enforced by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, or FMCSA). Those rules cover driver hours, logbooks and electronic logging device (ELD) data, driver qualification, drug-and-alcohol testing, and maintenance. A violation of one of them can prove fault on its own. Truck cases also involve more potential defendants and much larger insurance policies — which is exactly why the company fights them harder.
Who can be held liable in a Florida truck accident?
Often more than just the driver. Depending on what happened, responsible parties can include the truck driver, the motor carrier that employed or dispatched the driver, the company that owns the truck or trailer, the maintenance provider that serviced (or failed to service) the vehicle, the shipper or loader responsible for the cargo, and the maker of a defective part such as a tire or brake. Each of these may carry separate insurance. Identifying every party is a big part of what makes a truck claim worth its true value, and it is one of the first things we investigate.
What evidence matters most in a truck accident case?
The records the trucking company controls. The electronic logging device (ELD), or "black box," records hours of service, speed, and hard-braking events. The driver-qualification file shows licensing, medical certification, and history. Post-crash drug-and-alcohol testing results, maintenance and inspection logs, dispatch records, the bill of lading, and any onboard or dash-camera footage all matter too. This evidence usually lives only in the company's hands — which is why we move to secure it immediately.
Why do I have to act fast after a truck crash?
Because the most important evidence is perishable. ELD data can be overwritten on a regular cycle, camera footage is often deleted automatically, and a company under no legal pressure has little reason to hold onto logs and files. We send a formal preservation letter — also called a spoliation letter — within days of taking your case, putting the carrier on legal notice that it must keep all of this. Florida's filing deadline is two years (Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a)), but the practical deadline to lock down the proof is far shorter.
Why are truck accident settlements usually larger than car accident settlements?
Two reasons. First, interstate freight carriers are required to carry much higher insurance coverage than a private driver, and several layers of policy — carrier, truck owner, broker — can sometimes apply. Second, a fully loaded commercial truck causes far more serious harm than a passenger car, so the injuries, medical needs, and lost earnings are greater. Your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) cannot cover that kind of loss; the trucking company's commercial policy is where the real recovery comes from. We make no promises about any specific case — every case is unique — but the stakes in a truck case are simply higher.
Client reviews

What clients say about working with us

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“The best lawyer in South Florida. Thank you DiStefano for all the hard work that you and your team have done to get me amazing results.”

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“I had a wonderful experience with Robert! He fought hard for me and kept me in the loop the whole time. The whole office is just great!”

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“Mr. DiStefano is the best! Kept me up to date with everything, and his paralegal Michelle also kept us informed. Happy with my settlement — I highly recommend him.”

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If a truck hurt you

Call before the evidence is gone.

Same-day response, Monday through Friday. Free case review. No fee unless we recover for you. Prefer to write? Reach us through our contact page.

(954) 572-8000
Robert DiStefano, Esq. · Fort Lauderdale