Bus passengers usually have no control over the driver, route, speed, maintenance, schedule, or safety decisions. When a passenger is injured because of a crash, sudden stop, unsafe turn, fall, defective door, poor boarding procedure, or negligent driver, the injured person may have a claim against the bus company, driver, public entity, contractor, or another responsible party.
A bus passenger injury lawyer can help determine what happened, who controlled the bus, who maintained it, who insured it, and whether the driver or company violated safety rules. These claims require fast action because bus video, witness information, passenger lists, and maintenance records may be lost if they are not preserved.
Common Bus Passenger Injury Claims
Bus passengers may be injured in many different ways, including:
Injuries Suffered by Bus Passengers
Passenger injuries may include concussions, traumatic brain injuries, neck injuries, back injuries, broken bones, knee injuries, shoulder injuries, hip fractures, internal injuries, burns, lacerations, emotional trauma, and wrongful death. Older passengers and disabled passengers may suffer especially severe injuries from falls or sudden movements inside the bus.
What Evidence Should Be Preserved?
Important evidence may include onboard video, exterior camera footage, driver statements, passenger witness information, inspection records, maintenance logs, incident reports, GPS data, dispatch communications, route schedules, driver training files, and company safety policies.
Call a Bus Passenger Injury Lawyer
Testa Law Group represents injured bus passengers and families after serious transportation accidents. Call 877-780-9052 for a free consultation with a bus passenger injury lawyer.
Mr. Testa, a Bus Passenger Injury Lawyer with a national practice who represents members of our society who have been seriously injured or killed due to the irresponsible acts of an individual or company. He is licensed to practice law in Texas, Louisiana, and Florida and admitted to practice in the Southern District of Texas and also in the United States Court of International Trade.