“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Broken Arrow, OK Speeding Accident Lawyer

Speeding kills—and reckless speeders cause devastating accidents on Texas roads every day. When a driver chooses to speed, they’re prioritizing their schedule over your safety—and when that decision causes a crash, they should be held accountable. McKay Law fights for victims of speeding accidents throughout OK. Speed amplifies every aspect of a crash—a crash at 60 mph generates four times the energy of a crash at 30 mph. That’s why speeding accidents tend to cause the most severe injuries—traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, paralysis, internal organ damage, amputations, severe burns, and wrongful death. Common speeding behaviors that cause crashes drivers exceeding posted speed limits, driving too fast for weather or road conditions, racing or aggressive driving, failing to slow in construction zones, speeding in residential or school areas, and tailgating at high speeds. Speed-caused crashes include catastrophic head-on wrecks, intersection crashes, single-vehicle rollovers, chain-reaction highway pileups, and pedestrian fatalities. Our Broken Arrow car accident attorneys know how to prove speed was a factor. We partner with crash investigators and engineers who use physics, vehicle data, and scene evidence to calculate impact speed. We obtain critical evidence—electronic vehicle data, photos and video from the scene, third-party witness testimony, and law enforcement findings. When a driver’s speed crosses into recklessness, the law allows for enhanced damages under Texas law, particularly when the driver was racing, drag racing, or operating at grossly excessive speed. We fight for the full scope of compensation available to you—medical bills, future care costs, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, and when warranted, punitive damages. Insurance companies for speeding drivers often try to shift blame to the victim—we shut those tactics down with hard evidence. Every speeding accident case is handled on a no-win, no-fee basis—you owe nothing unless we recover for you. If you or a loved one was injured by a speeding driver, evidence disappears quickly—early investigation is essential to a strong case. Call McKay Law now for a complimentary case evaluation with a Broken Arrow, OK reckless driving accident attorney who will pursue every dollar your case is worth.

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Speeding Accident Lawyer in Broken Arrow, OK | McKay Law

Speeding Crash Attorney in Broken Arrow, OK | McKay Law

The Basics of Speeding Crash Cases

Speeding is one of the leading causes of fatal crashes in Oklahoma and nationwide. The physics are unforgiving — higher speeds mean longer stopping distances and far more violent impacts. Doubling your speed quadruples the crash energy. McKay Law represents speeding accident victims in Broken Arrow and across the state.

How Speeding Causes Crashes

  • Less time to respond to hazards
  • Longer stopping distances
  • Inability to steer at high speed
  • Dramatically higher impact forces
  • Reduced effectiveness of safety equipment
  • Tire failure from excessive speed
  • More severe results when impact occurs

How These Wrecks Occur

  • Aggressive driving and road rage
  • Running late
  • DUI
  • Street racing
  • Failure to adjust speed for conditions
  • Speeding through work or school zones
  • Young or new drivers
  • Delivery and trucking schedule pressure
  • Police pursuits

Common Speeding Accident Types

  • Following-too-close wrecks at high speed
  • Wrong-way wrecks at speed
  • T-bone and intersection accidents
  • Tip-over wrecks from high-speed maneuvers
  • Single-vehicle run-off-road crashes
  • Chain-reaction crashes
  • Pedestrian and cyclist strikes

Typical Speed-Related Crash Injuries

  • Severe head trauma
  • Permanent paralysis
  • Crush injuries
  • Compound fractures
  • Internal organ damage
  • Amputations
  • Thermal injuries
  • Major soft-tissue injuries
  • Cervical strain
  • PTSD and anxiety
  • Death from catastrophic crashes

Speed Limits in Oklahoma

Oklahoma law caps speeds at:

  • Up to 75 mph on rural interstates
  • 70 mph on most urban interstates
  • 65 mph on divided highways
  • Generally 55 mph on undivided highways
  • Typically 25 mph in residential zones
  • Reduced limits in school and construction zones

Beyond posted limits, Oklahoma requires driving at speeds appropriate for the actual conditions — so the speed limit isn’t always lawful.

Evidence of Speeding in Crash Cases

  • EDR readouts on speed at impact
  • Skid mark measurements
  • Engineering reconstruction
  • Vehicle damage analysis
  • Eyewitness accounts of speed
  • Surveillance and traffic camera footage
  • Officer findings on speed
  • Cell phone records
  • Vehicle GPS

Who Can Be Held Liable in a Speeding Accident

  • The at-fault motorist
  • Their employer in cases involving commercial drivers
  • The vehicle owner where the owner let an unsafe driver use the vehicle
  • A bar or restaurant in Oklahoma dram shop cases involving a drunk speeding driver
  • A road authority in charge of negligently maintained or designed roads

How Shared Fault Works

Oklahoma follows modified comparative fault (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13). You can recover if your fault is 50% or less, though your share reduces the final award. Comparative fault is rarely an absolute defense.

What You Must Prove

  • Legal Obligation — Drivers must operate vehicles at safe speeds.
  • Violation of That Duty — Speed limits or the basic speed law was violated.
  • A Direct Link — Speed led to the impact and damage.
  • Quantifiable Losses — The full financial and personal toll.

Recovery for Victims

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Ongoing rehabilitation expenses
  • Lost wages and loss of earning power
  • Damage to belongings
  • Non-economic damages
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Loss of consortium
  • Survivor damages when the wreck was fatal
  • Exemplary damages in cases of extreme speed or impaired driving

When Speeding Justifies Punitive Damages

Oklahoma allows punitive damages when a driver’s conduct goes beyond ordinary negligence. Situations that often justify punitive damages include:

  • Going far above the posted limit
  • Speeding while impaired
  • Illegal racing
  • Distracted speeding
  • Evading law enforcement
  • Repeated speeding violations

Time Limits to Be Aware Of

You typically have two years from the date of the crash to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Wrongful death actions also follow two-year statute.

How McKay Law Approaches Speeding Accident Cases

We move quickly to lock down vehicle electronic records, retain accident reconstruction experts to prove speed, partner with healthcare providers, push for exemplary damages where conduct justifies them, and treat each matter as trial-ready.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How do you prove the other driver was speeding?

A: Black box data, skid marks, crash reconstruction, witnesses, and video.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing upfront. No fee unless we recover.

Q: The other driver got a speeding ticket — does that help my case?

A: Yes. A citation is strong evidence of negligence.

Q: I was speeding too — can I still recover?

A: Probably, yes. As long as the other driver bears more blame, you can recover.

Q: Should I give the insurance company a recorded statement?

A: No. Talk to a lawyer first.

Q: Can I get punitive damages?

A: Possibly. Reckless or willful conduct can trigger punitive damages.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the crash (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Act quickly — black box data may be lost.

Recovering Damages From a Speed-Related Wreck in Broken Arrow, OK

Speeding is a factor in roughly a quarter of all traffic fatalities. It’s among the easiest forms of negligence to establish. A Broken Arrow car accident attorney builds the case around the physics and the records.

Why Speed Multiplies Injury Severity

The relationship between speed and damage isn’t proportional. Double the speed and you quadruple the energy of impact. A 50% speed increase nearly doubles the energy of impact.

That’s the reason speed crashes typically result in:

  • Severe trauma
  • Higher rates of fatality
  • More vehicle occupants seriously injured
  • Total losses
  • Cascading collision events

Two Kinds of Speeding — Both Negligent

Driving Over the Posted Limit

Exceeding the marked speed. Most jurisdictions, including OK, treat this as negligence per se when speeding leads to the collision.

Driving Too Fast for Conditions

The form many people miss. Even when technically legal, going too fast for what the road demands is still negligence. Drivers must reduce speed for:

  • Adverse weather conditions
  • Heavy traffic
  • Road work
  • High pedestrian traffic
  • Curves and hills
  • Low-light conditions

A driver doing 65 in a 70 zone during heavy rain can absolutely be found at fault for excessive speed.

How Speed Gets Proven

Black Box (Event Data Recorder) Data

Most vehicles built after 2013 are equipped with black boxes. EDRs record the seconds before impact including speed, throttle, brake application, and steering inputs. Preserving the EDR is critical.

Skid Mark Analysis

Pre-impact skids contain mathematical evidence. Forensic engineers can derive speed from physical evidence on the road.

Crush Damage Analysis

The amount of vehicle deformation allows reconstruction of velocity at impact. Engineers apply crash energy formulas.

Surveillance and Dashcam Footage

Video evidence sometimes provides definitive proof. Traffic cameras are all potential sources.

Witness Testimony

Witnesses on the scene give speed-related observations. Less mathematical than reconstruction, eyewitness evidence supports the technical proof.

Police Report and Citations

Officer documentation of speed supports the negligence finding. Adjudicated traffic violations create issue preclusion.

Speeding and Punitive Damages

Standard speed violations rarely justify enhanced damages, but reckless levels of speed often do. Conduct that may support punitive damages includes reckless driving at extreme speeds, driving at flagrant excess, speeding in school zones or construction zones, and drunk driving plus excessive speed.

What Insurers Argue

“The Speed Didn’t Actually Cause the Crash”

Insurers often concede the speeding but dispute causation. They claim the speeding didn’t matter. Speed dramatically affects stopping distance, and that contribution is enough for liability.

“The Plaintiff Was Speeding Too”

Insurers often allege the injured driver was also speeding. How OK handles shared fault can reduce — but typically doesn’t eliminate — recovery.

“The Speed Was Reasonable for Conditions”

Even when speed is admitted, adjusters say the limit shouldn’t apply. This defense gets defeated through evidence of the actual conditions.

Damages in Speeding Cases

Reflecting the destructive force of these wrecks, recoverable losses run high. Recoverable damages include long-term treatment, past and future income loss, non-economic damages, survivor claims in fatal cases, and enhanced damages in egregious cases.

Attorney Costs

Car accident lawyers handling these cases charge no upfront fees. Case reviews cost nothing.

Move Quickly on Evidence

EDR records get lost when cars are repaired or sold. Tire marks vanish within days. Video gets deleted on retention schedules. Contacting a Broken Arrow speeding accident attorney quickly secures the proof that makes these claims winnable. The legal deadline also keeps running.

McKay Law Is Your Broken Arrow Advocate After A Speeding Accident

Speed kills — and when a driver decides that getting somewhere a few minutes faster is worth gambling with other people’s lives, the outcomes can be life-shattering. The laws of physics are unforgiving: a crash at 60 miles per hour delivers far more than twice the energy of a crash at 30, and that extra force converts directly into broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, internal bleeding, and lifelong disability. At McKay Law, we build speeding crash cases by obtaining every piece of data that tells the honest story — black box and event data recorder downloads, traffic and surveillance footage, cell phone records, skid mark measurements, and witness accounts that pin down how fast the at-fault driver was really going. We partner with accident reconstruction experts to turn that data into a airtight picture of disregard a jury can understand.

Insurance companies will work to shift blame — suggesting you shared fault for the crash, that your injuries predate the wreck, or that the speeding wasn’t actually the cause. When you sign on with the McKay Law family, we reject those tactics and put the focus right back where it belongs: on the driver who decided the speed limit didn’t apply to them. We chase compensation for trauma care, surgeries, hospitalization, rehabilitation and physical therapy, future medical needs, missed income, reduced earning capacity, vehicle replacement, and the life-altering pain and emotional toll a high-speed crash leaves behind. Call us right away at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to book your free consultation and place a firm that won’t back down {on your side|in your corner|fighting for you|behind you,

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