“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Claremore, OK Speeding Accident Lawyer

Excessive speed is deadly—and in Claremore, OK, speed-related crashes claim victims every day. When someone ignores posted limits, they’re prioritizing their schedule over your safety—and when that decision causes a crash, they should be held accountable. McKay Law stands up for victims of speeding accidents throughout OK. Speed turns minor mistakes into deadly collisions—stopping distance, reaction time, and impact severity all increase dramatically with speed. That’s why speeding accidents tend to cause catastrophic harm: TBIs, broken bones, life-threatening internal injuries, permanent disability, and fatalities. 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. Speeding-related collisions include deadly crashes at intersections, on curves, in construction zones, and on rural highways. Our Claremore reckless driving accident lawyers build powerful cases against speeding drivers. We bring in forensic specialists who analyze skid marks, vehicle damage, debris patterns, and crash dynamics. We obtain critical evidence—vehicle event data recorders (black boxes) that capture pre-crash speed, traffic camera and surveillance footage, witness statements, dash cam video, and police reports documenting citations for speeding. Speeding is more than careless—it can support claims for punitive damages under Texas law, particularly when the driver was racing, drag racing, or operating at grossly excessive speed. We pursue every category of damages 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. The insurers covering reckless motorists often try to shift blame to the victim—we shut those tactics down with hard evidence. Every client we represent is handled on a contingency fee basis—no attorney fees unless we win. If you’ve been hurt by a speeding driver, evidence disappears quickly—vehicle data, witnesses, and physical evidence at the scene can vanish within days. Reach out to McKay Law right away for a no-cost case review with a Claremore, OK reckless driving accident attorney who will pursue every dollar your case is worth.

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Speeding Accident Lawyer in Claremore, OK | McKay Law

Speeding Wreck Lawyer in Claremore, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Speeding Accident Claim?

Speed is a factor in nearly a third of all traffic deaths. Speed is a force multiplier — higher speeds mean longer stopping distances and far more violent impacts. Doubling your speed quadruples the crash energy. Our firm fights for speeding accident victims in Claremore and throughout Oklahoma.

How Speeding Causes Crashes

  • Less time to respond to hazards
  • Increased braking distance
  • Inability to steer at high speed
  • Greater crash forces and energy
  • 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
  • Drivers rushing to reach a destination
  • Drunk or impaired driving
  • Racing on public roads
  • Driving too fast for weather or traffic
  • Speeding in construction or school zones
  • Drivers without experience handling high speeds
  • Trucker fatigue and deadline pressure
  • Fleeing law enforcement

Common Speeding Accident Types

  • Rear-end collisions
  • Head-on crashes
  • T-bone and intersection accidents
  • Tip-over wrecks from high-speed maneuvers
  • Single-vehicle run-off-road crashes
  • Highway pileups
  • Pedestrian and cyclist strikes

What These Crashes Do to Victims

  • Brain injuries
  • Spinal cord injuries and paralysis
  • Crushing trauma
  • Compound fractures
  • Internal bleeding
  • Traumatic amputation injuries
  • Burns from post-crash fires
  • Lacerations and deep wounds
  • Whiplash and neck injuries
  • Mental and emotional trauma
  • Fatal injuries

Speed Limits in Oklahoma

Oklahoma sets maximum speed limits:

  • 75 mph on rural interstates
  • 70 mph on urban interstates
  • 65 mph on divided highways
  • 55 mph on two-lane highways
  • 25 mph in residential areas
  • School and work zone reductions

Oklahoma’s basic speed rule requires safe speeds given weather, traffic, and road conditions — meaning the posted limit isn’t always the legal maximum.

How We Prove the Other Driver Was Speeding

  • Black box data
  • Skid mark analysis
  • Crash reconstruction by qualified experts
  • Vehicle damage analysis
  • Eyewitness accounts of speed
  • Video evidence
  • Police accident reports and officer observations
  • Phone data
  • GPS and telematics data

Potential Defendants

  • The driver who was speeding
  • An employer when the speeding occurred during work
  • The car’s owner where the owner let an unsafe driver use the vehicle
  • A liquor establishment when overservice played a role
  • A road authority responsible for dangerous road conditions that contributed to the crash

How Shared Fault Works

Fault can be shared under Oklahoma law (Okla. Stat. tit. 23, § 13). You can still recover if you are 50% or less at fault, though your share reduces the final award. Comparative fault is rarely an absolute defense.

What You Must Prove

  • A Duty of Care — The driver had to obey speed limits and drive safely.
  • Negligent Conduct — The defendant exceeded a safe speed.
  • Causation — The excessive speed caused or contributed to the crash and your injuries.
  • Concrete Harm — The full financial and personal toll.

What Compensation Looks Like

  • Past and future medical expenses
  • Long-term care and rehabilitation
  • Lost income and reduced earning capacity
  • Property damage
  • Pain and suffering
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Damages for impact on relationships
  • Wrongful death compensation when the wreck was fatal
  • Exemplary damages when conduct rises above ordinary negligence

When Speeding Justifies Punitive Damages

Punitive damages may apply in cases of reckless or willful conduct. Examples that may warrant punitive damages include:

  • Driving at dramatically excessive speeds
  • High speeds plus alcohol or drugs
  • Illegal racing
  • Speeding while distracted (texting, phone use)
  • Speeding to evade police
  • 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). Fatal crash claims also follow two-year statute.

Our Process

We move quickly to secure crash data before it’s lost, bring in qualified reconstruction experts, coordinate with treating providers, seek punitive awards in egregious cases, and build each file for the courtroom from the start.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

A: Vehicle data, forensic evidence, and expert analysis.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero 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. Oklahoma allows recovery if you’re 50% or less at fault.

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

A: Don’t. Talk to a lawyer first.

Q: Can I get punitive damages?

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

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 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 Claremore, OK

Speeding is a factor in roughly a quarter of all traffic fatalities. Speeding creates a clear evidentiary path. A Claremore speeding accident lawyer turns the speeding into the case’s strongest leverage.

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 crash at 60 mph carries four times the destructive force of a crash at 30 mph.

That’s the reason speed crashes typically result in:

  • Life-altering harm
  • Higher rates of fatality
  • Multiple-injury crashes
  • Greater property damage
  • Cascading collision events

Two Kinds of Speeding — Both Negligent

Driving Over the Posted Limit

The obvious form. 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, driving too fast for conditions is negligent. Drivers must reduce speed for:

  • Adverse weather conditions
  • Heavy traffic
  • Work areas
  • Areas with vulnerable road users
  • Limited visibility
  • Darkness

A driver maintaining posted speed in fog may still be negligent.

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. This data can be overwritten if the vehicle is driven or repaired.

Skid Mark Analysis

Tire marks tell a story. Crash reconstruction experts can derive speed from physical evidence on the road.

Crush Damage Analysis

How much the vehicles crumpled provides evidence of impact speed. Reconstruction experts use these calculations.

Surveillance and Dashcam Footage

Recordings from nearby cameras sometimes provides definitive proof. Dashcams from other vehicles are all potential sources.

Witness Testimony

Other drivers, pedestrians, and bystanders describe how fast the vehicle was traveling. Less scientific than EDR records, eyewitness evidence supports the technical proof.

Police Report and Citations

Charges filed against the driver supports the negligence finding. A criminal conviction for speeding create issue preclusion.

Speeding and Punitive Damages

Standard speed violations rarely justify enhanced damages, but extreme speeding can. Behavior potentially warranting exemplary damages includes reckless driving at extreme speeds, speeding 30+ mph over the limit, extreme speed where pedestrians are present, and drunk driving plus excessive speed.

What Insurers Argue

“The Speed Didn’t Actually Cause the Crash”

Adjusters acknowledge speed but argue it wasn’t a factor. They claim the speeding didn’t matter. At higher speeds, drivers have less time to perceive and respond, often making speed a substantial cause even when other factors exist.

“The Plaintiff Was Speeding Too”

Insurers often allege the injured driver was also speeding. The state’s comparative fault system may cut damages without barring them.

“The Speed Was Reasonable for Conditions”

Even when speed is admitted, insurers argue road conditions made the speed reasonable. This defense gets defeated through expert testimony on safe driving practices.

Damages in Speeding Cases

Because speeding crashes tend to cause severe injuries, claim values are typically significant. Recoverable damages include extensive past and future medical care, past and future income loss, non-economic damages, survivor claims in fatal cases, and enhanced damages in egregious cases.

Attorney Costs

Speeding accident attorneys work on contingency. Initial consultations are free.

Move Quickly on Evidence

Black box data can be overwritten if the vehicle is driven. Tire marks vanish within days. Camera systems overwrite. Engaging counsel promptly triggers the preservation steps that protect the case. The filing time limit also keeps running.

McKay Law Is Your Claremore 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 catastrophic. The basic science are merciless: a crash at 60 miles per hour delivers far more than twice the energy of a crash at 30, and that extra force translates directly into broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, internal bleeding, and lifelong disability. At McKay Law, we build speeding crash cases by securing every piece of proof that tells the real 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 compelling picture of recklessness a jury can understand.

Insurance companies will attempt to shift blame — suggesting you shared fault for the crash, that your injuries existed before the wreck, or that the speeding wasn’t truly the cause. When you become part of 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 demand compensation for trauma care, surgeries, hospitalization, rehabilitation and physical therapy, future medical needs, lost paychecks, reduced earning capacity, vehicle replacement, and the deep pain and emotional toll a high-speed crash imposes. Phone us today at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to schedule your free consultation and put a firm that won’t back down {on your side|in your corner|fighting for you|behind you,

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