Posted On: April 30, 2010

Maryland Trucking Accident News: Semi Driver Could Face Charges after Baltimore County Commuter Train Collision

In Maryland highway collisions as well as automobile accidents on Annapolis, D.C., Columbia and other cities’ streets, occupants of a passenger car can be severely injured when hit by a large commercial delivery truck or over-the-road tractor-trailer rig. But even these large trucking company vehicles can be damaged and the drivers hurt, if not killed, if they are hit by a train.

Depending on the circumstances commuter train riders and railroad employees can also be hurt if the engine hits a large truck sitting on a railroad crossing. Personal injury attorneys in Baltimore and elsewhere can receive numerous inquiries following severe train-truck wrecks. The speed of the train and the size of the commercial vehicle usually determine how many passengers might sustain serious injuries as a result.

A few weeks ago, a truck driver operating a Volvo-powered 18-wheel rig crossed paths with a light rail passenger train. According to news reports at the time, investigators were checking into the collision in Cockeysville, MD, and were expected to lodge charges against the truck driver.

The driver, 53-year-old Mark Szurek of the John W. Ritter Trucking company, was transporting a Wabash trailer filled with plastic bottles when the crash occurred around 9:20am. Police stated that the driver appeared to have ignored the railroad crossing warning light and was crossing the tracks when the southbound train hit the truck.

The impact split the trailer in two, a part of which collided with a 2009 Honda Civic that was behind the semi at the time. The driver of the car, 45-year-old Elliott Schoen from Montgomery County refused medical treatment.

According to a Baltimore County police, the operator of the Maryland Transit Administration train was trapped for about 25 minutes before being rescued and then transported to Maryland Shock Trauma Center were she was in serious but stable condition at the time of the report.

Based on news reports, seven passengers were on the train at the time of the crash. Two were taken to local hospitals to be treated for minor injuries while the remaining five were reportedly unhurt.


Truck driver in light rail crash expected to face charges, BaltimoreSun.com, March 25, 2010

Charges pending against truck driver in rail crash, FrederickNewspost.com, March 24, 2010

Posted On: April 21, 2010

Maryland Truck Crash News: Car Collides with Baltimore School Bus Injuring Eight People

One particular area that Maryland residents should expect the utmost in safety is in the school buses in which our children ride daily. The fact is that passenger cars, delivery trucks and commercial big rigs share the same roads with our kids’ school buses and church shuttle vehicles. The law of averages means that, sadly, an occasional traffic accident involving a school bus will likely occur sometime in your city or town.

While we all hope our children will not be involved in a bus-car or bus-truck collision, it could happen any time. As a Baltimore trucking accident lawyer, I and my associates understand how difficult it is to care for an injured child while holding down a job and running a household. Anytime a person, young or old, is hurt in a car crash or truck wreck, the victim’s family will usually be under a financial stress caused by mounting medical and healthcare bills.

Not long ago, a school bus loaded with elementary school kids from Winston Middle School was caught up in a bad traffic accident in the Baltimore area. According to news reports, a number of people were injured when a car collided with the students' bus. The wreck occurred on a weekday morning just before 8am at the intersection of Loch Raven Boulevard and Lochwood Road.

It was difficult to tell if the crash was due to driver error or perhaps some kind of mechanical problem or defective equipment. One witness likened the accident to that of a scene from an action movie. News articles described the incident by saying that a passenger car pulled onto Loch Raven and collided the bus, which was transporting disabled children.

Witnesses said that the car went airborne onto the bus. As a result, eight people were injured in the crash, all of whom were taken to the hospital by ambulance. When rescuers arrived on the scene they found four people trapped in the automobile -- three young children and one an adult, according to the Baltimore Fire Department.

Two of the young boys got out of the car by themselves, but a seven-year-old girl was badly injured and apparently couldn’t get out by herself. The female driver herself was trapped and had to be cut out by emergency personnel. According to police reports, the driver’s injuries were not life threatening, but the girl was apparently bleeding badly and was transported to Hopkins Pediatric.

Also hurt in the car-bus collision were four special needs children who were riding on the school bus when it was hit. Although those kids reportedly were not severely hurt, they were all complaining of some kind of minor injuries at the time. At the time of the report, police had not yet determined who, if anyone, was at fault in the crash.


Several Injured After Car & School Bus Crash, WJZ.com, March 23, 2010


Posted On: April 14, 2010

Maryland Trucking Accident News: Family Vacates Home following Garbage Truck Crash in South Baltimore

Apparently trucking accidents can occur anywhere, even when you’re family is supposedly safe at home. That’s what happened not long ago when the driver of a trash collection truck apparently lost control and slammed into the front of a South Baltimore home. As a Maryland personal injury lawyer, I have helped many people following the aftermath of semi collisions and tractor-trailer crashes on our highways and surface streets.

Although most truck-related crashes involve other vehicles, this particular accident caused massive damage to a family’s home. It is only by shear luck that no one was seriously injured in the incident. Accidents involving large commercial vehicles can range from minor abrasions, to deep cuts and bruises, contusions, neck and spinal damage, or traumatic brain injuries.

According to reports, the family who house was damaged did receive help from the city, who owns and operates the garbage truck that hit the structure. The city’s housing commissioner was told by the mayor to do “everything possible to help this family."

In response, the city reportedly moved the family into a hotel, which is in Towson and too far from work and school for the family, which doesn’t own a car. There is apparently no close bus line which the parents can use to get to work, and their five-year-old grandson can’t easily get to school, which is located back in their Southwest Baltimore neighborhood.

Still the damage to the home is estimated at $30,000, according to news reports. In fact the structure itself had been boarded up and at the time of the reports was condemned. Based on initial reports, the garbage truck peeled away the front brick and the actual front of the home is mostly gone. The house has been boarded up and condemned.

Only time will tell if this family gets their home back in its original condition and can resume their lives with as little upset as they already have experienced.


City Helps Family After Home Hit By Trash Truck Reporting, WJZ.com, March 3, 2010

Posted On: April 7, 2010

Baltimore Trucking Accident News: Tractor-trailer Crash Kills Husband; Critically Injures Wife in Harford, Maryland

Trucking accidents are some of the most deadly for occupants of passenger cars, light trucks and motorcycles. From thrown tire treads to loose trailers and out-of-control semi-tractors on severe grades, a motorist who is in the wrong place at the wrong time could be seriously hurt or even killed as a result.

As a Maryland trucking accident lawyer and personal injury attorney, I am dedicated to assisting victims and their families recover damages following a devastating tractor-trailer collision. Big rigs, also known as 18-wheelers, can haul in excess of 30 tons of cargo. With that much weight traveling at highway speeds, a serious disaster is just one wrong move away.

Not long ago, the Maryland State Police reported a fatal tractor-trailer crash that took the life of a Washington man and seriously injured his wife. According to news articles, the collision occurred on Interstate 95 crash in Harford County, MD, when a semi hit the couple as they stood by the side of the road.

Police reports indicate that the husband and the wife, who were traveling in separate vehicles, pulled there respective cars over to the side of the northbound lanes of the interstate. The husband, 38-year-old Leonard Clark, was driving a Dodge Charger and his wife, 39-year-old Kimberly Clark, was operating a Dodge Durango aside the northbound lanes of I-95.

Apparently an approaching tractor-trailer drove too close to the couple and hit both people just after 11pm on a weekday evening. Emergency medical personnel arrived at the scene and provided treatment on site before transporting the victims to Maryland Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore. Unfortunately, the husband’s injuries were too extensive and he dies at the scene.

The wife sustained life-threatening injuries and was transported to the hospital for treatment by doctors. According to reports at the time, Mrs. Clark was listed in critical condition. Authorities were still investigating the accident and it was not known at the time why the couple had stopped and gotten out of the vehicles prior to the crash.


Husband killed, wife injured after I-95 crash in Harford, BaltimoreSun.com, February 26, 2010