As a Fort Lauderdale tire defect lawyer, Robert DiStefano sees the same story again and again: a family is driving home, the tire suddenly fails, the vehicle swerves, and it rolls. Police call it a single-car crash and write "tire failure" on the report. But a tire that was built right and cared for does not shed its tread on a normal drive. Often the real cause is a defect baked into the tire long before you ever bought it.
This is not an ordinary car-accident claim. It is a product case. Instead of arguing about who ran the red light, we put the failed tire under the microscope — sometimes literally — and ask whether it was designed badly, built badly, or sold without a warning it needed. When the answer is yes, the company that made the tire can be held responsible for what it did to you.
Two failures cause most of the serious injuries we see. Tread separation is when the top layer of the tire — the part that touches the road — peels away from the body of the tire while you are driving. A blowout is a sudden loss of air, often when the tire's inner structure gives out. At highway speed, either one can throw a tall vehicle like an SUV or pickup into a roll. The injuries that follow are rarely small.