What the Trucking Company Is Already Doing While You Are Still in the ER

How Fast Do Trucking Companies Investigate GA-400 Crashes

After a serious crash on GA-400, the trucking company’s response often starts within hours, while the injured driver is still being treated. Trucking companies often send a rapid-response team to the scene to photograph the wreck, interview witnesses, and pull data from the truck before it is repaired or returned to service. Federal rules let a carrier delete some of that evidence after short retention windows: hours-of-service and electronic logging device records after six months (49 CFR 395.8(k)), and the daily inspection report after three months (49 CFR 396.11). Under Georgia law, the carrier’s duty to preserve this evidence arises once litigation is reasonably foreseeable, and early legal action puts that duty beyond dispute. Acting within days, not weeks, protects the records that decide fault.

In the first hours after a serious GA-400 crash, the carrier’s response team is typically:

  1. Dispatching investigators to the scene
  2. Photographing vehicle positions and road conditions
  3. Interviewing witnesses
  4. Preserving evidence that favors the carrier
  5. Notifying its insurer and defense counsel
  6. Reviewing electronic data pulled from the truck
  7. Building early fault arguments against the other driver

Key Takeaways

  1. A carrier’s investigation team can reach a GA-400 crash scene the same day, before the injured person leaves the hospital.
  2. Federal law requires a trucking company to keep hours-of-service and ELD records for only six months (49 CFR 395.8(k)) and the daily vehicle inspection report for three months (49 CFR 396.11).
  3. Georgia has no statute requiring a carrier to automatically preserve crash data. The duty to preserve begins when litigation is reasonably foreseeable to the carrier, the standard the Georgia Supreme Court set in Phillips v. Harmon, 297 Ga. 386 (2015).
  4. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, a victim found 50 percent or more at fault recovers nothing, which is why carriers gather recorded statements early to build a fault argument.
  5. The event data recorder, dashcam footage, dispatch records, and driver qualification file are separate evidence sources, and each can be requested by name in a preservation demand.
  6. The statutes and figures below apply as of June 2026 and should be verified against the current FMCSA regulations and the Georgia Code before you rely on them.

How fast does a trucking company investigate a crash on GA-400?

Carriers and their insurers treat a serious crash as the start of a defense investigation. A rapid-response team can reach a scene along the GA-400 corridor within hours, recording skid marks, vehicle positions, and road conditions near interchanges like Windward Parkway before that physical evidence is cleared. This team works for the carrier’s defense, documenting conditions that support a fault argument against the other driver. The police report is a starting point and rarely captures the truck’s internal data.
Practice note: Photograph the scene and the truck if you are able, or ask someone with you to do it. Capture the trailer, the DOT number on the cab door, and any company logos. The logo and the DOT number do not always match, and that discrepancy can indicate a second responsible company.

What truck accident evidence disappears, and how long does the company have to keep it?

Federal retention windows are short, and once they pass, deletion is legal unless a preservation duty applies. The windows below set the clock.
Evidence Federal retention window What it shows
Hours-of-service and ELD records 6 months (49 CFR 395.8(k)); backup 6 months (49 CFR 395.22) Whether the driver exceeded legal driving hours
Driver vehicle inspection report (DVIR) 3 months (49 CFR 396.11) Reported defects, including mirrors and brakes
Event data recorder (the “black box”) No fixed federal window; can be overwritten or lost once the truck is repaired Speed, braking, and throttle in the seconds before impact
Dashcam footage Set by carrier policy; often overwritten on a cycle The driver’s view and reaction before the crash
Dispatch and trip records Tied to the 6-month supporting-document rule Scheduling pressure that may have forced illegal hours
The event data recorder and dashcam footage sit outside any fixed federal window and are often the first to vanish when the truck goes back into service.
Practice note: Write down the carrier name, DOT number, and trailer number while the details are fresh. A preservation demand that names specific evidence is harder to sidestep and strengthens a later spoliation argument if records go missing.

Does Georgia law require the trucking company to save the data?

Georgia has no statute that automatically requires a carrier to preserve crash evidence. The duty to preserve arises when the carrier knows or reasonably should know that litigation is foreseeable (Phillips v. Harmon, 297 Ga. 386 (2015)). A preservation letter from an attorney provides that notice directly, and a carrier’s own post-crash investigation can also show litigation was foreseeable.

Without that notice, a carrier can let the six-month and three-month windows run and delete records under its normal schedule. Once the duty has attached, Georgia courts treat destruction of relevant evidence as spoliation, which can carry penalties at trial, including a jury instruction that the missing records would have hurt the carrier. The Phillips court treated a defendant’s own internal investigation and its notice to counsel and insurers as signs that litigation was foreseeable, so the carrier’s rapid response can itself trigger the duty. The practical point is timing: early legal action protects the records before they expire.

Why does the trucking company’s insurer call so quickly?

The early call serves the carrier’s defense. Under Georgia’s modified comparative negligence rule (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33), a victim who is 50 percent or more at fault recovers nothing, so a recorded statement taken before the injured person has counsel can produce admissions that raise their fault percentage. Georgia’s rule is stricter than the 51 percent bar some states use. Defense teams on GA-400 cases routinely argue that the injured driver contributed through lane position, speed, or following distance, and a statement given from a hospital bed can supply the language they use. You are not required to give a recorded statement to the other side’s insurer before speaking with your own attorney.
Practice note: If an adjuster requests a recorded statement, you can decline and refer them to your attorney. Declining is not an admission of fault.

What should you do while the carrier is investigating?

A few steps protect your side of the record while you focus on treatment.

  1. Get a full medical evaluation and keep every record. A normal ER scan does not rule out a disc injury that later shows up on an MRI, so document all follow-up care.
  2. Preserve your own evidence: scene photos, witness names and numbers, and the truck’s DOT and trailer numbers.
  3. Hold off on giving a recorded statement to the carrier’s insurer until you have advice.
  4. Contact a truck accident attorney quickly, so evidence can be preserved and a demand sent before the retention windows run.


A demand to preserve evidence carries weight when it comes from counsel, names the ELD data, event data recorder, dashcam footage, and driver qualification file, and creates spoliation exposure for the carrier if those records later go missing. An
Alpharetta truck accident attorney who handles GA-400 cases can send that demand within days and begin building the fault record before the carrier’s version sets in. For a family dealing with a severe injury, personal injury representation in North Fulton County also frees them to focus on medical care while the evidence is secured.

FAQ

Q1. How long after a truck accident can evidence still be recovered?
  • It depends on the evidence and whether a preservation duty has been triggered. Hours-of-service and ELD records carry a six-month federal window (49 CFR 395.8(k)), and the daily inspection report three months (49 CFR 396.11). A preservation demand sent soon after the crash can extend the carrier’s duty past those windows.
Q2. The trucking company’s adjuster already called me. Did I hurt my case?
  • Speaking with an adjuster is common and does not automatically end a claim. What matters is whether you gave a recorded statement and what you said. Tell your attorney exactly what was discussed, and route further questions through counsel.
Q3. The truck had a different company logo than the DOT number on the cab. Who is responsible?
  • More than one company can be liable. The driver’s employer, the carrier whose authority the truck operates under, the equipment owner, and the company that loaded the freight can each be a separate defendant. A logo and DOT number that point to different companies are reasons to identify every party before deadlines pass, which is a core part of truck accident representation across Georgia.
Q4. My ER visit said I was fine, but an MRI later showed a disc injury. Does that matter?
  • Yes. Delayed-onset symptoms are common after a high-energy collision, and a later MRI can document a disc injury the ER visit missed. Maintain continuous records from both providers, since gaps in treatment allow the defense to argue the injury arose from another cause.
Q5. Can a truck accident claim be settled without filing a lawsuit?
  • Often, yes. A truck accident attorney can investigate, preserve evidence, and negotiate with the carrier’s insurer before any lawsuit is filed. Hiring an attorney does not commit you to litigation; filing becomes necessary only if a fair settlement is out of reach or a deadline requires it.
Q6. Will my Georgia case end up in federal court?
  • It can. When the carrier is based out of state, and the amount in dispute exceeds $75,000, the defense can move the case from a Georgia state court to federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and § 1441. Serious truck cases often clear that threshold. The court that hears the case affects discovery timelines and the jury pool.

The statutes and figures here apply as of June 2026. Verify current requirements through the FMCSA (fmcsa.dot.gov) and the official Georgia Code before relying on them. This is general information, not legal advice for a specific situation.

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