Feb192012

Elderly Tennessee Driver Wrecks Going The Wrong Way On I-40

According to a recent study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, older drivers face substantially elevated risk of being involved in and responsible for crashes in which they themselves die, and they pose more risk to other road users than the lowest-risk drivers do.

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Feb162012

Nashville Automobile Accident Attorney Reports On A Drunk Driving Head-On Collision In Murfreesboro, Tennessee

Every Alcohol-Related Fatality Is Preventable

Drunk Drivers Kill

Drunk Drivers Kill

It’s every driver’s nightmare, you are driving along the highway minding your own business and without warning a vehicle going the other direction crosses into your lane and slams head-on into your vehicle. This nightmare played out for two women and two children the other night as a pickup truck, driven by a 59-year-old man, who Murfreesboro police believe had been drinking, did just that.

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Feb162012

Nashville Personal Injury Lawyer Talks About Teen Driving Fatalities

Teen Drivers

Teen Drivers

Among experienced Tennessee automobile accident attorneys, the Governor’s Highway Safety Association (GHSA), the National Highway Safety Administration (NHTSA), and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), it is generally agreed that teen drivers have the highest crash risk of any age group.

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Jan152012

Speeding Nashville Motorcyclist Fails To Negotiate Turn and Dies

High Powered Motorcycle + Speed = Death

High Powered Motorcycle + Speed = Death

Combine a high-powered motorcycle, a sharp turn and high speed and the outcome isn’t going to come under the category of pretty. In what has come to be an all to familiar situation, a 37-year-old Nashville man was riding his 2005 Yamaha down Pettus Road when he failed to negotiate a curve and lost control. The man and the motorcycle landed on a concrete culvert.

As an experienced Tennessee motorcycle accident attorney I am concerned that while all other types of fatal crashes involving cars, trucks and pedestrians are on the decrease, motorcycle fatalities continue to rise. What lies at the cause of this phenomenon? Several things come to mind.

First of all manufacturers continue to make motorcycles bigger and faster. Sometimes known as “crotch rockets” these high-powered bikes require more skill and unfortunately anybody with the money or credit can buy one and without any specialized training, take to the highway.

As is the case here, motorcycles are more likely to be involved in a fatal collision with a fixed object than are other vehicles. In 2007, 25 percent of the motorcycles involved in fatal crashes collided with fixed objects, compared to 18 percent for passenger cars, 13 percent for light trucks, and 3 percent for large trucks.

Motorcycles made up nearly 3 percent of all registered vehicles in the United States in 2006 and accounted for only 0.4 percent of all vehicle miles traveled. Per vehicle mile traveled in 2006, motorcyclists were about 35 times more likely than passenger car occupants to die in a motor vehicle traffic crash and 8 times more likely to be injured.

If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee motorcycle accident caused by a careless motorcycle rider, contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident attorneys at Phillip Miller & Associates for a free consultation to learn about your rights and remedies.

Jan142012

Tennessee Drunk Driver Sentenced To Eight Years In Prison

A Clarksville man finally finds out that he has to pay for his irresponsibility. The lesson not to drink and drive didn’t stick when he was first convicted of DUI. As the result of his failure to learn he left a 5-year-old girl with a torn trachea, torn colon and permanent damage to her spinal cord that has left her paralyzed from the chest down. I mean, 5-years-old and her life is irreparably changed.

The 25-year-old man was out with friends took drunk and ignored the pleading of friends for him not to drive. He convinced them that he could drive and took them up on the offer to follow him home. To the horror of his friends, he began to speed up and they dropped off when he reached speeds over 100-miles-per-hour. Moments later they were stunned as he crossed the centerline and slammed head-on into the vehicle carrying the child and her 20-year-old aunt. Our prayers go out to these two young women and their family and friends.

Drunk driving is one of America’s deadliest crimes. In Tennessee in 2008, 327 people were killed in crashes where the driver or motorcyclist had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .08 or higher. At a sentencing hearing this past week the man pleaded guilty to numerous charges and was sentenced to serve eight years in the Tennessee Department of Corrections.

If you or a loved one is involved in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a drunk driver contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident lawyers at Phillip Miller & Associates and find out about your rights and remedies. Call 615-356-2000.

Prison For Drunk Driver

Prison For Drunk Driver

Jan122012

Distracted Memphis Driver Fails To Yield To A School Bus And Hits Teen

It's Big and Yellow and has Blinking Lights

It's Big and Yellow and has Blinking Lights

A Memphis man, the driver of a Jeep Cherokee, told police he was distracted and didn’t see the emergency lights, or the stop sign on a huge yellow school bus, nor the hearing impaired child prior to striking the child. According to local media reports the driver of the school bus activated the red lights and stop sign at which time the 13-year-old left his driveway and proceeded to board the bus.

The young man suffered injuries to his head and was transported by ambulance to Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. He is in critical but stable condition. Our prayers go out to him for a speedy and complete recovery.

He did not tell the police what had distracted him, but I’d bet a dollar to a donut he was using his cell phone. Driver inattention is the leading factor in most crashes. Nearly 80 percent of crashes and 65 percent of near-crashes involved some form of driver inattention within three seconds before the event.

Primary causes of driver inattention are distracting activities, such as cell phone use, and drowsiness. Investigators will most probably review her cell phone records and find that she was engaged in a conversation with someone.

Come on people, it’s up to us to change the culture of distracted driving. Education is the first step and enforcement is the next. The distracted driver was charged with Failure to Maintain Control and Safe Lookout along with Overtaking and passing a school bus. Alcohol and speed were not factors in the accident.

If you or a loved one are involved in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a distracted driver contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident attorneys at Phillip Miller & Associates and find out about your rights and remedies. Call 615-356-2000

Jan102012

Dandridge Man Is Ejected And Dies In Interstate Roadway Departure Crash

Driving while drinking and not wearing your seatbelts is a recipe for disaster. I’m sure that the 49-year-old Dandridge Tennessee man who died in a one-vehicle roadway departure crash on Interstate 40 (mile marker 433) would agree if he had the opportunity to do it all over again, but in life, there are no do-overs. The passenger was not injured.

The four-door Honda was traveling eastbound on I-40 when the driver lost control, it crossed lanes and then went onto the shoulder before it went into an embankment and rolled several times. Both men were ejected from the car.

Drunk driving is one of America’s deadliest crimes. In Tennessee in 2008, 327 people were killed in crashes where the driver or motorcyclist had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .08 or higher. That is down from 377 people killed in 2007 with a BAC of .08 or higher

If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a drunk driver you owe it to yourself to contact the experienced Tennessee automobile accident attorneys at Phillip Miller & Associates for a free consultation to determine your rights and remedies.

Jan102012

Is The City Of Chattanooga Responsible For Seven Wrecked Cars In Icy Wilcox Tunnel

Governmental Negligence

Governmental Negligence

Under the common law, governments were immune from lawsuits for some negligent actions of government employees, leaving injured parties with no recourse in the event of an injury. The Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act removes those restrictions. The Act applies to all local governmental entities, which are defined by T.C.A. § 29-20-102(3) to include any:

· Municipality;

· Metropolitan Government;

· County;

· Utility District;

· School District;

· Nonprofit Volunteer Fire Department receiving funds from a county or city;

· Human Resource Agency; and

· Development District.

The reason I bring this up is that I read a report in a local media source from Chattanooga that covered an incident in which seven vehicles crashed inside the Wilcox Tunnel. The cause of the crashes was identified as ice forming inside the traffic tunnel. Fortunately no one was injured but two of the vehicles were totaled.

How does the Act come into play, you ask? An experienced Nashville personal injury lawyer would ask a threshold questions: Did, or through the exercise of reasonable care, should agents of the city have known that this condition would occur? The next question is: If the traffic lane in the tunnel ices over is it foreseeable that When ice forms that vehicles will crash? And the final questions is; Knowing the danger, did the City act was with due care in remedying this problem?

If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a negligent governmental official recovering damages can be a tricky proposition and that’s why, in cases like this, you need an experienced Nashville automobile accident lawyer to handle your case. The lawyers at Phillip Miller & Associates have handled dozens of Governmental Tort cases over the years and can guide you skillfully through the process. Call 615-356-2000.

Jan72012

Clarksville Teen Driver Hot-Dogging Loses Control Of His Vehicle And Passenger Suffers Serious Head Injury

Teen Drivers

Teen Drivers

According to witnesses the facts are simple, a 2009 Pontiac G-3 Hatchback, driven by a 19 year old, made a left turn out of KFC’s parking lot, headed east on Madison Street, the vehicle hit a curb, left the roadway, and struck a utility pole. Any questions? Was he speeding or hot-rodding, or was he distracted by the other teens in the vehicle?

As an experienced Nashville automobile accident attorney, I’d bet that he was hot-dogging, and because of his inexperience was unable to maintain control of the car. Fortunately the driver and three passengers were uninjured, but unfortunately, the bad news is that the 19-year-old passenger in the middle backseat, the one not wearing his seatbelt, slammed forward into the windshield and suffered serious head injuries.

Among experienced Tennessee automobile accident attorneys, the Governor’s Highway Safety Association (GHSA), the National Highway Safety Administration (NHTSA), and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), it is generally agreed that teen drivers have the highest crash risk of any age group. Per mile, the crash rate for 16 year-old drivers is 10 times the rate for drivers between 30 and 59. The basic reasons behind this statistic are obvious, teen drivers have no experience with the myriad issues faced by drivers with experience, furthermore, they are immature and often takes risks, most often speeding, and are easily distracted which contribute to the increased death rate.

If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by a teen driver contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident attorneys at Phillip Miller & Associates and find out about your rights and remedies.

Dec262011

Two Oak Ridge Tennessee Police Officers Being Investigated For Road Rage Incident

Avoid Road Rage

Avoid Road Rage

Road rage isn’t something we usually find police officers involved in but an interesting story out of Knoxville seems to show that no one is immune if they don’t keep their emotions under control while driving. According the local media reports two off duty Oak Ridge police officers were pulling out of a local Waffle House and failed to yield to oncoming traffic. When the driver of the other car failed to allow them to cut him off the officers flipped him the bird, he flipped back.

When the two vehicle stopped at a stopped light the men jumped out of their car and approached the man’s car. He got out of his car and confronted the men when one of the police displayed a .40 cal. Glock handgun.  The man jumped back into his car and fled the scene, followed the car, took down it’s tag number and called 911. A witness also called 911 and described the men and their car.

Investigating officers stopped the men but no charges have been filed. The victim told local media that he intends to prosecute the off-duty police officers. The City of Oak Ridge needs to take action or lose the confidence of the people they are to protect and serve.

Many road rage incidents have resulted from drivers overreacting and allowing their egos to stand in the way of common sense and good judgment rather than safely reporting aggressive driving incidents. A simple display of common courtesy will often be appreciated and may even become contagious. Try it! It might work for you.

If you or a loved one is injured or killed in a Tennessee automobile accident caused by an aggressive or raging driver contact the experienced Nashville automobile accident attorneys at Phillip Miller & Associates and find out all about your rights and remedies.