Train-Involved Accidents According to data released by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)in 2016, Phoenix tops the list of U.S. cities with the most dangerous railroad crossings.
You’ve seen ads on TV, posters on the sides of buses or bus stops, and maybe have even received ads in the mail for personal injury attorneys.
Two people were killed and 116 injured when a New York-to-Miami bound Amtrak train collided with an empty freight train this past Sunday.
Almost 1.4 million Americans sustain a traumatic brain injury (TBI) each year and most of them do not know how to file a TBI lawsuit to protect themselves after those TBIs.
Peoria police are investigating a fatal train crash that happened on the early evening of April 28th. A person was hit and killed by the train.
If you are involved in a personal injury case, you’ll want to know what happens during a pretrial and trial, should your case need to go to trial.
After suffering a personal injury, you’ll want to know what options are available. Below we’ll discuss an average timeline of a personal injury case, as well as provide some insight into why you should consider working with a personal injury attorney.
At the end of July, 15-year-old Mariah Contreras was hit and killed by a train. According to police, her and three of her friends were “playing chicken” with the trains when she was hit.
While accidents involving cars and light-rail trains do not occur that often, they do happen. When they do, you’ll need to know what to do and how to pursue any claims you might be entitled to.
On April 3, within a 12 hour period, three train accidents occurred in the Northeastern United States. Those crashes happened just a month after another Amtrack train that was headed from Chicago to LA was derailed, injuring 32 people.