Who is at blemish next to this semi truck accident-police/lawyers simply please?
A semi truck driver, was on a road that had a ratification lane. He was in the right lane- when the ratification lane was about to lapse a car behind him approved to pass. He hauls haz-mat-so he have to get on the road (he have his turn signal on for a while-so the car knew he be getting over) or else he would have gone rotten the road. The car was around 1/2 way up the trailer (not even to the truck yet) when another car be coming the other way. the trucker couldn't pull past its sell-by date the road with out causing a awfully dangerous haz-mat situation and instead of the car aft him slowing down-they freaked out and drove across the other lane and went off the side of the road. He call his dispatcher and they told him to keep going. The car going the other course stopped, but the trucker couldn't based on his hazerdist material-he would have stopped traffic at the back him. He doesn't know if anyone was hurt.
What will-or could- happen presently? How can he protect himself?
Answers:
If the driver know someone went off the road, and he did not stop.. he have a problem if they can identify him. Never mind what the hell the dispatcher told him. He left the scene of an accident.
As for who be at fault.. no one here, advocate or otherwise, can make that determination. The whole point of any investigation is for ALL party to provide statements, or uninterested witnesses. Maybe one of the cars was going too nifty.. maybe the person that "freaked out" have a seizure.
I am not a lawyer.. adjectives it takes is common sense to know he can be charged beside leaving the scene or failing to render aid.
It doesn't seem to be that he has any liability if the facts are as you stated them. He should have call 911 but if he didn't there were plenty of other drivers around who could ring up. I would not worry about it. There are idiots doing a tour everywhere so all you can do is drive defensively and carefully.
Depends on what state he was in. It wasn't hit and run or any point, but it would depend on if they have a good sameriten (spelling) tenet. Plus did he call 911 and report what was going on, if so they would own a record of him calling and at least trying to bring back help out to the scene. But I know in this crazy world everyone other wants to blame the big truck driver. I know my husband drives over the road, and I work for the sheriff's office. Good Luck
He witnessed an accident, even purely the other person going off the road can be considered an calamity. So yes he could be charged as leaving the scene and that is feasible all based on what you said. Now the driver can explain that the dispatcher told him to maintain going. At that point it would be seen as he explained to them and they told him to go. Driver is potential to follow the dispatcher's advice and from there he may be cleared and may hold blame put on them. Considering he is haz-mat they may let it go as a misunderstanding cause by dispatch, although I'm not a cop or lawyer so for all I know in that are special rules that would allow him to keep going.
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What will-or could- happen presently? How can he protect himself?
Answers:
If the driver know someone went off the road, and he did not stop.. he have a problem if they can identify him. Never mind what the hell the dispatcher told him. He left the scene of an accident.
As for who be at fault.. no one here, advocate or otherwise, can make that determination. The whole point of any investigation is for ALL party to provide statements, or uninterested witnesses. Maybe one of the cars was going too nifty.. maybe the person that "freaked out" have a seizure.
I am not a lawyer.. adjectives it takes is common sense to know he can be charged beside leaving the scene or failing to render aid.
It doesn't seem to be that he has any liability if the facts are as you stated them. He should have call 911 but if he didn't there were plenty of other drivers around who could ring up. I would not worry about it. There are idiots doing a tour everywhere so all you can do is drive defensively and carefully.
Depends on what state he was in. It wasn't hit and run or any point, but it would depend on if they have a good sameriten (spelling) tenet. Plus did he call 911 and report what was going on, if so they would own a record of him calling and at least trying to bring back help out to the scene. But I know in this crazy world everyone other wants to blame the big truck driver. I know my husband drives over the road, and I work for the sheriff's office. Good Luck
He witnessed an accident, even purely the other person going off the road can be considered an calamity. So yes he could be charged as leaving the scene and that is feasible all based on what you said. Now the driver can explain that the dispatcher told him to maintain going. At that point it would be seen as he explained to them and they told him to go. Driver is potential to follow the dispatcher's advice and from there he may be cleared and may hold blame put on them. Considering he is haz-mat they may let it go as a misunderstanding cause by dispatch, although I'm not a cop or lawyer so for all I know in that are special rules that would allow him to keep going.
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