Posted On: January 29, 2010

Baltimore Trucking Accident News: Maryland Woman Injured in Collision with Garret County Snow Plow

Winter driving presents its own particular danger to the driving public. Slippery conditions can lead to single-car or multi-vehicle accidents, while poor visibility can result in serious injury accidents as well. As a Baltimore personal injury attorney and Maryland motorist myself, I know the potential for property damage and physical harm that cold-weather driving can cause. Large trucks, such as semi tractor-trailer rigs, delivery trucks and heating oil tanker trucks can also pose addition danger on the road.

Earlier this month, a woman was injured in a trucking-related accident when her car was hit by a Garrett County snow plow operated by the county’s roads department. According to reports, Deanna Louise Schroyer, a 46-year-old Friendsville resident, was driving her GMC Sierra pickup truck along Bear Creek Road just before 10am when she apparently drifted into the oncoming lane just as the plow was approaching.

According to Maryland State Police, the Northern Garrett Rescue Squad and the Accident Volunteer Fire Department responded to the accident after being alerted by the Garrett County 911 center. Once on the scene they treated both drivers.

Schroyer was transported to Western Maryland Regional Medical Center in Cumberland following the crash with unknown injuries. The driver of the plow, 50-year-old Ricky Nugent of Grantsville, MD, was unhurt in the accident. He was reportedly driving a county-owned 2000 Sterling dump truck fitted with a snow plow for clearing roads in the area.

News reports indicate that the state police issued a citation to Schroyer charging her with failure to drive right of center.


Woman injured in snowplow crash, Times-News.com, January 7, 2010

Posted On: January 22, 2010

Maryland Injury News: Baltimore Tractor-trailer Driver Helps Second Driver in Trucking Accident on I-78

Trucking accidents, especially on the interstate, can be horrendous events. Occupants of passenger cars, SUVs and light pickup trucks can be severely injured if their vehicle is hit by a semi truck, such as a Peterbuilt, Kenworth or International long-haul commercial truck. As a Maryland injury law firm, my staff has helped numerous individuals who have been hurt in traffic accidents involving large, big-rig tractor-trailers.

This is not to say that truck drivers themselves do not become injured as well. With a dozen or more tons of cargo on the trailer behind the truck cab, an over-the-road trucker can easily be hurt or killed in a high-speed crash or even medium-speed trucking accidents. A news article highlighted what can happen when two trucks collide on the expressway.

According to news reports, there was a double tractor-trailer crash just north of the Maryland border in mid-December that injured the drivers of both rigs. The accident, which occurred around 2am on I-78 in Delaware County, PA, apparently tied up traffic for hours.

Based on police reports, a truck driven by Baltimore resident Joe Craig was parked along the shoulder of the interstate. Craig had reportedly stopped to look at a map when another semi truck apparently lost control and clipped the front of the Maryland man’s trator-trailer. The out-of-control rig then careened down a 30-foot embankment. In the process, the truck tore off about 200 feet of safety guard rail on the roadside before rolling down the hill. It was unknown if the cause was due to defective vehicle equipment.

Before emergency crews arrived, Craig helped the other driver to safety. He reportedly said that he thought the man had died in the accident, which threw debris all around the crash site. Fortunately, neither of the drivers was seriously injured, although the driver who lost control was taken to a local hospital with reportedly non-life threatening injuries.


Double Tractor Trailer Accident Along Interstate 78 Injures One, Closes Right Lane, Fox43.com, December 15, 2009


Posted On: January 11, 2010

Baltimore Trucking Accident News: Maryland Tow Truck Driver Killed in Fatal Head-on Collision

Seatbelts (or safety belts) do serve a valuable function and those who choose not to avail themselves of their protection run the risk of serious injury or even death in the event of a traffic accident. It’s not surprising that the larger the vehicle the more protected an occupant feels, however even commercial truck drivers place their lives in the hands of fate when they do not wear a seatbelt.

As a Maryland trucking accident lawyer and personal injury attorney, I understand the dangers awaiting motorists around every turn on our interstates, highways and urban streets. Whether you drive a tractor-trailer rig, panel truck, tanker or delivery vehicle, safety should be your primary concern. Trucking-related accidents can be deadly, not just for the drivers and occupants of relatively small passenger vehicles, but also to truck drivers themselves.

Not long ago, a Maryland tow truck driver lost his life in King George County when his wrecker apparently collided head-on with a pickup truck on Route 206 not far from Indiantown Road, also known as Route 610.

The crash occurred around 1:30pm on December 28 when a 1995 International-brand tow truck driven by 34-year-old Ryan O. Robinson crossed the centerline and hit an oncoming Ford F-250 traveling eastbound. Robinson, a resident of Montgomery Village, Maryland, was pronounced dead at the scene. Police reported that he had not been wearing his seatbelt.

According to police, the driver of the Ford pickup, 37-year-old David L. Warring of Fredericksburg, VA, was injured during the collision. Warring was treated at the scene by emergency workers and transported by ambulance to Mary Washington Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. He was subsequently released from the hospital.

Based on the ongoing police investigation, Warring was reportedly wearing his seatbelt. The cause of the crash was still under investigation at the time of the news report, therefore it is unknown if defective equipment was to blame or if it was solely driver error.


Maryland tow truck driver killed in auto accident, Fredericksburg.com, December 29, 2009

Posted On: January 4, 2010

UPS Truck Driver Involved in Fatal Baltimore County Crash Charged with Three Violations

Trucking accidents, due to their scale, can result in tragic and many time fatal outcomes. Such was the case in an October United Parcel Service truck crash that killed the driver of a second vehicle and injured a young passenger. As a personal injury lawyer practicing in the Baltimore area, I have helped numerous victims of trucking-related wrecks recover damages caused by another driver’s negligence.

In this case, the operator of the delivery truck has only recently been charged with several traffic offenses. Based on news reports, Baltimore County police charged 28-year-old Kevin Callahan of Owings Mills with negligent driving, failure to stop at a red signal and failure to obey a traffic device.

On October 5, 2009, Callahan was driving north on York Road when his truck broadsided a vehicle at the intersection of York and Corbett roads in Monkton, MD. The collision killed the driver, 48-year-old Tim Wheatley, and injured Wheatley’s 9-year-old daughter who was getting a ride to Sparks Elementary School. The girl was critically injured in the accident and has since been released from the hospital, according to news reports.

Although the accident resulted in a death, law enforcement authorities investigated the accident and determined that there was no intent to harm anyone on Callahan’s part. The UPS driver now has the choice to accept the charges and pay the penalties including points on his license, or he can go to court and fight the citations. There was no mention of whether the deceased man’s family would pursue a wrongful death civil suit against the delivery driver or his employer, UPS.


UPS driver charged in fatal crash in Monkton, ExploreBaltimoreCounty.com, December 21, 2009