Behind every wrongful death case is a specific set of facts: a driver who ran a
red light, a property owner who ignored a dangerous condition, a manufacturer
who knew about a defect and said nothing. Establishing what happened —
and proving the chain of responsibility — is the work that makes accountability
possible.

A wrongful death claim requires establishing the same elements as any negligence case — applied to the most serious consequence negligence can produce:

Commercial truck accidents involve additional layers of accountability. Federal motor carrier regulations impose specific duties on trucking companies and their drivers. When a commercial carrier violates hours-of-service rules, fails to maintain vehicles, or employs an unqualified driver, liability extends to the company. We preserve data from black boxes, electronic logging devices, and maintenance records before that evidence can be overwritten.
Drunk and impaired driving deaths may support not only compensatory damages but also claims for punitive damages — additional accountability for conduct that showed conscious disregard for the safety of others.

Fatal falls, drownings, structure collapses, and violent crimes occurring in locations where security was inadequate can all give rise to wrongful death claims. We investigate the property’s history prior incidents, maintenance records, prior complaints to establish what the owner knew and when.

Product liability wrongful death cases often involve extensive technical investigation. We work with engineers and product safety experts to document what failed and why, and to trace liability through the product’s design, manufacturing, and distribution chain.

When medical errors cause a patient’s death a missed diagnosis that allowed a treatable condition to become fatal, a surgical error, a failure to monitor a patient at known risk Georgia’s wrongful death statute applies alongside medical malpractice law. These cases require medical expert testimony to establish the standard of care, the deviation from it, and the causal link to the death.

