Bloomington Truck Accident Lawyer
Hit by a semi or commercial truck on I-55, I-74, I-39, Veterans Parkway, or Empire Street in Bloomington-Normal? Phillips Law Offices has handled commercial-vehicle injury cases across Illinois since 1945, including the Eleventh Judicial Circuit. Free consultation. No fee unless we win.
A fully loaded tractor-trailer can weigh 20 to 30 times more than a passenger car. When a commercial truck collides with a family sedan on I-55 north of Bloomington, on the I-74 corridor through downtown, on I-39 south of the “X” interchange at Le Roy, or on a rural McLean County highway, the result is rarely a fender-bender – it is a life-changing injury or a fatality. If you or a loved one was hurt in a truck crash in Bloomington, Normal, Hudson, Towanda, Heyworth, Le Roy, Lexington, or anywhere across McLean County, the lawyers at Phillips Law Offices are ready to investigate, preserve the evidence, and pursue every dollar of compensation the law allows.

Recognized for results in Illinois personal-injury law
Eight decades of trial work has put the firm and its lawyers on the lists that matter. A sample of the recognitions on file:
Super Lawyers
Personal Injury – Plaintiff
Million Dollar Advocates Forum
Member
Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum
Member
Best Lawyers in America
Personal Injury Litigation – Plaintiffs
AV Preeminent
Martindale-Hubbell peer rating
Illinois Trial Lawyers Association
Member in good standing
American Association for Justice
Member
Chicago Bar Association
Member
No aspect of these advertisements has been approved by the Supreme Court of Illinois. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Truck crashes in Bloomington and central Illinois: where and why they happen
Bloomington-Normal sits at one of the most active freight crossroads in downstate Illinois. I-55 runs north-south from Chicago to St. Louis straight through the east side of town. I-74 cuts east-west, connecting the Quad Cities, Peoria, and Champaign-Urbana. A few miles east of Le Roy, I-39 meets I-74 at what locals call “the X” interchange, funneling long-haul carriers between Bloomington, Rockford, and the Wisconsin line. US-150 ties in from the south, and Veterans Parkway forms the city’s outer commercial ring, feeding Empire Street, Eastland Drive, Market Street, Main Street, and the Mitsubishi/Rivian manufacturing corridor in Normal. With State Farm’s corporate footprint, ISU and IWU student traffic, and the Mitsubishi-turned-Rivian assembly plant, the area sees a steady mix of long-haul tractor-trailers, dump trucks, agricultural carriers, and final-mile delivery vans.
Crashes in this corridor can cross McLean, Woodford, Tazewell, Logan, and Livingston county lines, which means a single case can implicate multiple circuit clerks and sheriff’s investigations. Interstate crashes bring Illinois State Police into the file. Phillips Law Offices has handled commercial-vehicle injury cases across the Eleventh Judicial Circuit and the wider Illinois state and federal courts, including the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois sitting in Urbana and Peoria.
Common causes we see in Bloomington truck crashes
- Hours-of-service (HOS) violations. Federal regulations under 49 CFR Part 395 cap driving time at 11 hours within a 14-hour on-duty window, with a 10-hour off-duty reset. ELD logs frequently show drivers running past the limit to make a delivery window.
- Distracted driving. Texting, dispatch messaging, in-cab cameras, and infotainment use are leading culprits. FMCSA bans hand-held mobile use for CMV drivers under 49 CFR 392.82.
- Speeding and unsafe lane changes on the I-55 and I-74 corridors, especially around the Veterans Parkway and Market Street interchanges during construction season.
- Improper loading or unsecured cargo that shifts at speed and triggers a rollover or jackknife – federal cargo-securement rules are in 49 CFR Part 393, Subpart I.
- Brake and tire failures tied to skipped DOT inspections or rushed maintenance.
- Inadequate driver training and negligent hiring by motor carriers under pressure to keep trucks rolling.
- Impaired driving – alcohol, prescription drugs, or amphetamines used to push through long routes.
- Blind-spot (“no-zone”) collisions during merges and right turns onto Veterans Parkway and Empire Street.
- Agricultural-equipment conflicts on rural McLean and Livingston county roads during planting and harvest.
Injuries that bring families to a truck accident lawyer
- Traumatic brain injuries, from concussion through diffuse axonal injury
- Cervical and lumbar spine injuries, including herniated discs and spinal cord damage
- Crush injuries to limbs requiring multiple surgeries or amputation
- Internal organ damage and internal bleeding
- Severe burns from cargo fires and ruptured fuel tanks
- Complex orthopedic fractures (pelvis, femur, tibia/fibula)
- Post-traumatic stress disorder and other psychological injuries
- Wrongful death of a spouse, parent, or child
Who is liable in a Bloomington truck crash
Unlike a two-car wreck, truck cases almost always have multiple defendants. Identifying every one of them is how we unlock the layered insurance coverages that make full recovery possible.
- The driver – for the operational negligence that caused the crash.
- The motor carrier – under respondeat superior for the driver’s negligence, plus direct claims for negligent hiring, training, supervision, retention, and entrustment.
- The truck owner if separate from the carrier (common in owner-operator arrangements).
- The shipper or freight broker for negligent selection of an unsafe carrier or unsafe routing.
- The maintenance contractor if a brake, steering, or tire failure traces to skipped or botched service.
- The cargo loader if shifting or overweight freight contributed to the crash.
- Component manufacturers in product-liability claims for defective brakes, tires, couplers, or under-ride guards.
- A government entity in narrow circumstances – for example a dangerous roadway condition – subject to the strict notice and limitations rules of the Tort Immunity Act, 745 ILCS 10/8-101.
The Illinois and federal law that drives a truck case
- Statute of limitations – personal injury: two years from the date of the crash under 735 ILCS 5/13-202.
- Wrongful death: two years under 740 ILCS 180/2.
- Property damage: five years under 735 ILCS 5/13-205.
- Modified comparative fault (50% bar): 735 ILCS 5/2-1116.
- Mandatory auto insurance: 215 ILCS 5/143a.
- Duty to report and remain at the scene: 625 ILCS 5/11-401 and 5/11-403.
- Federal interstate carrier liability minimums: 49 CFR Part 387 – $750,000 for general freight, up to $5 million for hazardous cargo.
- Federal hours-of-service: 49 CFR Part 395 (driving-time limits and ELD requirements).
- Federal cargo securement: 49 CFR Part 393, Subpart I.
- Driver qualification files: 49 CFR Part 391 (DQ files, medical certifications, road tests, employment history).
What to do in the first 72 hours after a Bloomington truck crash
- Get medical attention first. Even if you feel okay at the scene, internal injuries and brain injuries can present hours or days later. Go to OSF St. Joseph Medical Center in Bloomington, Carle BroMenn Medical Center in Normal, or an urgent care, then follow up with your primary doctor.
- Call 911 and make sure a written police report is generated. Crashes on I-55, I-74, and I-39 are worked by Illinois State Police District 6. Bloomington PD, Normal PD, and the McLean County Sheriff handle most surface streets and rural roads.
- Photograph everything you can – vehicle positions, debris field, skid marks, the truck’s DOT and MC numbers on the cab, the trailer placards, license plates, and any visible damage to the truck’s brakes, tires, or under-ride guards.
- Get names and contact info for the truck driver, every witness, and the responding officers.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the trucking company’s insurer. They call within 24 to 48 hours specifically because they know you are still in shock. You are not required to talk to them.
- Call a truck accident lawyer right away. ELD data, dash-cam footage, and inspection records can lawfully be overwritten or destroyed on rolling cycles. A spoliation letter has to go out fast.
How Phillips Law Offices investigates a Bloomington truck case
- Day 1 – Spoliation letter. We put the carrier, broker, and any maintenance contractor on written notice to preserve the ECM/black-box download, ELD logs, dash-cam, GPS/telematics, driver qualification file, drug-test results, and the truck’s maintenance and inspection history.
- Scene reconstruction. We retain accident reconstruction engineers and, where appropriate, a commercial-vehicle safety expert to map the crash, calculate speeds, and document road, signage, and visibility conditions.
- Medical workup. We coordinate with treating physicians and, where the injuries warrant it, life-care planners and vocational economists to project future medical and wage losses.
- Insurance and corporate discovery. We identify every layer of coverage – the carrier’s primary, excess, MCS-90 endorsements, shipper or broker policies, and any owner-operator policies – so the full coverage is on the table.
- Resolution. Most cases resolve through pre-suit negotiation or mediation. When the carrier and its insurer will not pay fair value, we file suit and try the case in courts across Illinois.
Meet the attorneys who will work on your case

Stephen D. Phillips
Managing Partner. Decades of trial experience in serious-injury and wrongful-death litigation.

Stephen J. Phillips
Partner. Focuses on complex personal-injury and commercial-vehicle cases throughout Illinois.

Terrence M. Quinn
Partner. Litigation focus on catastrophic injury, wrongful death, and trial practice.

Alec D. Mesrobian
Associate. Works on case investigation, discovery, and trial preparation in serious-injury matters.
What our Illinois clients have said
“Stephen Phillips and his team were absolutely incredible to work with. They were professional, responsive, and genuinely cared about my case.”
Reagan Tokoly
“Phillips Law Offices handled my case with professionalism and care. They kept me informed throughout the entire process.”
Brandon DeWitt
“The team at Phillips Law Offices was outstanding. They fought hard for my case and got me the compensation I deserved.”
Dani Berny
Client testimonials reflect individual experiences and are not a guarantee of any particular result. Every case is unique and is evaluated on its own facts.
Frequently asked questions
How long do I have to file a truck accident lawsuit in Bloomington, Illinois?
Illinois gives most adult personal-injury plaintiffs two years from the date of the crash to file suit under 735 ILCS 5/13-202. Wrongful-death claims also follow a two-year window under 740 ILCS 180/2. If a public entity is involved, the Tort Immunity Act (745 ILCS 10/8-101) shortens the window to one year for many local-government defendants and requires a formal notice.
Can a Chicago-based firm handle my Bloomington truck case?
Yes. Phillips Law Offices is admitted in all Illinois state and federal courts, including the Eleventh Judicial Circuit (McLean, Ford, Livingston, Logan, and Woodford counties) and the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois sitting in Urbana and Peoria. We represent injured clients across central Illinois and travel for depositions, mediations, and trial when the case calls for it.
Who can be held liable in a Bloomington truck crash besides the driver?
Truck cases almost always involve more than the driver. Liable parties can include the motor carrier (under respondeat superior and for negligent hiring, training, or retention), the truck’s owner if separate from the carrier, the shipper or freight broker, a maintenance contractor, the cargo loader, and the manufacturer of a defective component such as brakes or tires.
What evidence needs to be preserved after a semi-truck crash?
Engine control module (ECM/black-box) data, ELD records under 49 CFR Part 395, driver qualification files, drug and alcohol test results, post-trip inspection reports, dash-cam footage, GPS/telematics, bills of lading, weight tickets, and the truck’s maintenance file. We send a written spoliation letter the day we are retained to lock down the file.
What if I was partly at fault for the Bloomington truck crash?
Illinois follows modified comparative fault under 735 ILCS 5/2-1116. You can still recover if you are 50% or less at fault, with damages reduced by your share. Cross the 50% line and recovery is barred.
How much is my Bloomington truck accident case worth?
It depends on the severity of injuries, lost income, medical bills, pain and suffering, loss of normal life, and the available insurance coverage. Federal law requires interstate motor carriers to carry minimum liability of $750,000 (up to $5 million for hazardous cargo) under 49 CFR Part 387. Past results are not a guarantee; every case is evaluated on its own facts.
Do I have to pay anything upfront to hire Phillips Law Offices?
No. We handle Bloomington truck-accident cases on a contingency fee. There are no hourly bills and no out-of-pocket cost to retain us. We advance the case costs and are reimbursed from the recovery. If there is no recovery, you owe us nothing.
Hablamos español
Si usted o un ser querido resultó herido en un accidente de camión en Bloomington o en cualquier parte de Illinois, llámenos al (312) 346-4262. La consulta es gratis y no cobramos honorarios a menos que ganemos su caso.
Contact our Bloomington truck accident lawyer
If you have been hurt in a truck crash in Bloomington, Normal, Hudson, Towanda, Heyworth, Le Roy, Lexington, or anywhere across McLean County, call Phillips Law Offices for a free, no-obligation case review. The sooner we get the spoliation letter out and the investigation started, the stronger your case will be.
Free, confidential case review
Phillips Law Offices, 161 N Clark St #4925, Chicago, IL 60601. Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm. Calls answered 24/7.
Related Phillips Law Offices truck accident pages
- Chicago Truck Accident Lawyers (main practice page)
- Peoria Truck Accident Attorney
- Springfield Truck Accident Lawyer
- Champaign Truck Accident Lawyer
- Rockford Truck Accident Lawyers
- Aurora Truck Accident Attorney
- Naperville Truck Accident Attorney
- Oak Park Truck Accident Lawyer
- How to Choose a Chicago Truck Accident Attorney
- What Happens When a Truck Driver Has an Accident?
Page reviewed by the attorneys at Phillips Law Offices. The information on this page is for general education only and is not legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. No aspect of these advertisements has been approved by the Supreme Court of Illinois.






