“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Duncan, OK Speeding Accident Lawyer

Excessive speed is deadly—and in Duncan, OK, speed-related crashes claim victims every day. When a motorist drives too fast for conditions, 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. The faster a vehicle is going, the more devastating the impact—doubling speed quadruples the force of impact. 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 excessive speed on highways, ignoring reduced limits in bad weather, street racing, school zone violations, and reckless driving on city streets. These accidents include catastrophic head-on wrecks, intersection crashes, single-vehicle rollovers, chain-reaction highway pileups, and pedestrian fatalities. Our Duncan car accident attorneys use every tool to establish excessive speed. We partner with crash investigators and engineers who reconstruct exactly how fast the at-fault driver was going. We obtain critical evidence—EDR data showing the at-fault driver’s actual speed at impact, video evidence, eyewitness accounts, and 911 calls reporting reckless driving. Extreme speeding behavior may support punitive damages on top of compensatory recovery under Texas law, especially in cases involving racing, extreme speeds, or willful disregard for safety. We recover every dollar you’re entitled to available to you—hospital costs, ongoing therapy, missed work, reduced earning ability, physical and emotional suffering, and exemplary damages where the law allows. The insurers covering reckless motorists often try to shift blame to the victim—we don’t let speeders’ insurers off the hook. All of our reckless driving claims is handled on a no-win, no-fee basis—zero out-of-pocket cost, period. If you or a loved one was injured by a speeding driver, don’t wait to act—vehicle data, witnesses, and physical evidence at the scene can vanish within days. Call McKay Law now for a free consultation with a Duncan, OK car accident lawyer who will pursue every dollar your case is worth.

Settlements Won
0 +
Million Dollars Won
0 +
Google 5 Star Reviews
0 +
Speeding Accident Lawyer in Duncan, OK | McKay Law

Speeding Crash Attorney in Duncan, 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 — every increase in speed dramatically multiplies crash forces and stopping distances. A crash at 50 mph carries more than twice the energy of a crash at 35 mph. McKay Law advocates for speeding accident victims in Duncan and in surrounding communities.

Why Speeding Leads to Accidents

  • Reduced reaction time
  • Longer stopping distances
  • Cars become harder to handle
  • More violent impacts
  • Airbags and crumple zones overwhelmed at high speed
  • Blowouts at high speeds
  • Higher injury and fatality rates

Why Drivers Speed

  • Aggressive driving and road rage
  • Time pressure
  • Alcohol or drug impairment increasing speed
  • Street racing
  • Excessive speed in rain, fog, or heavy traffic
  • Speeding in construction or school zones
  • Inexperienced drivers
  • Trucker fatigue and deadline pressure
  • Speeding to evade police

Types of Speeding-Related Crashes

  • Rear-end collisions
  • Head-on collisions
  • Side-impact crashes
  • Rollover accidents
  • Vehicles leaving the roadway at speed
  • Multi-vehicle pileups
  • Pedestrian and cyclist strikes

Typical Speed-Related Crash Injuries

  • Severe head trauma
  • Spinal cord injuries and paralysis
  • Injuries from cabin collapse
  • Compound fractures
  • Internal organ damage
  • Amputations
  • Thermal injuries
  • Major soft-tissue injuries
  • Soft-tissue neck damage
  • PTSD and anxiety
  • Death from catastrophic crashes

How Oklahoma Regulates Speed

Oklahoma sets maximum speed limits:

  • 75 mph on rural interstates
  • Generally 70 mph on urban interstates
  • 65 mph on most divided highways
  • 55 mph on most two-lane state highways
  • 25 mph in residential areas
  • Lower speeds required in school and work zones

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

How We Prove the Other Driver Was Speeding

  • EDR readouts on speed at impact
  • Tire mark forensics
  • Engineering reconstruction
  • Crash damage indicating speed
  • Eyewitness accounts of speed
  • Video evidence
  • Police accident reports and officer observations
  • Phone data
  • Tracking data showing speed

Potential Defendants

  • The speeding driver
  • The driver’s employer when the speeding occurred during work
  • The car’s owner when the owner allowed someone unfit to drive
  • An alcohol vendor where overserving contributed to drunk speeding
  • A government entity in charge of negligently maintained or designed roads

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 damages are reduced by your fault percentage. Mutual fault doesn’t bar recovery as long as the other driver bears more of the blame.

Building the Evidence

  • Legal Obligation — Drivers must operate vehicles at safe speeds.
  • Negligent Conduct — The defendant exceeded a safe speed.
  • Causation — The excessive speed caused or contributed to the crash and your injuries.
  • Concrete Harm — Measurable economic and non-economic harm.

What Compensation Looks Like

  • Healthcare costs
  • Lifetime care costs
  • Lost income and reduced earning capacity
  • Property damage
  • Pain and suffering
  • The toll on daily life
  • Loss of companionship
  • Wrongful death damages when the wreck was fatal
  • Punitive damages when conduct rises above ordinary negligence

Reckless Speeding and Punitive Awards

Oklahoma allows punitive damages in cases of reckless or willful conduct. Situations that often justify punitive damages include:

  • Extreme speeding (e.g., 30+ mph over the limit)
  • High speeds plus alcohol or drugs
  • Illegal racing
  • Phone use combined with high speed
  • Speeding to evade police
  • Repeated speeding violations

Filing Deadline

Oklahoma generally gives 2 years from the date of the crash to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Fatal crash claims also follow two-year limit.

Our Process

We get to work immediately to preserve EDR and black box data, engage specialists in crash physics, document the full scope of injuries, push for exemplary damages where conduct justifies them, 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: Nothing. No fee unless we recover.

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

A: Absolutely. It strengthens the case considerably.

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

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

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

A: Never. Refer them to your attorney.

Q: Can I get punitive damages?

A: In some cases, yes. 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.

Speeding Accident Claims in Duncan, OK

Excessive speed contributes to about 25% of fatal crashes nationwide. Speeding creates a clear evidentiary path. A local attorney experienced with speed-related crashes knows how to use that evidence to maximize recovery.

Why Speed Multiplies Injury Severity

The physics here aren’t intuitive. Crash energy goes up exponentially with speed. A 50% speed increase nearly doubles the energy of impact.

This is why speeding cases tend to involve:

  • Severe trauma
  • Greater fatality risk
  • More vehicle occupants seriously injured
  • More extensive vehicle destruction
  • Secondary impacts and multi-vehicle pileups

Two Kinds of Speeding — Both Negligent

Driving Over the Posted Limit

Exceeding the marked speed. Posted-limit violations are typically a per se breach of duty when excessive speed produces the injury.

Driving Too Fast for Conditions

The less obvious version. Even at or below the posted limit, driving too fast for conditions is negligent. Drivers must reduce speed for:

  • Rain, ice, snow, and fog
  • Heavy traffic
  • Work areas
  • Areas with vulnerable road users
  • Curves and hills
  • Nighttime

Someone at the limit on icy roads 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 key vehicle parameters in the seconds before collision. Downloading this data quickly is essential.

Skid Mark Analysis

Tire marks tell a story. Crash reconstruction experts can calculate minimum speeds from skid lengths.

Crush Damage Analysis

Damage patterns allows reconstruction of velocity at impact. Engineers apply crash energy formulas.

Surveillance and Dashcam Footage

Recordings from nearby cameras may show the vehicle’s velocity. Business surveillance systems all candidates for preservation.

Witness Testimony

People who saw the crash describe how fast the vehicle was traveling. Less scientific than EDR records, witness accounts add corroboration.

Police Report and Citations

Charges filed against the driver is powerful evidence of fault. Adjudicated traffic violations can establish negligence as a matter of law.

Speeding and Punitive Damages

Standard speed violations rarely justify enhanced damages, though excessive speed sometimes does. Speed-related conduct that can trigger enhanced damages includes reckless driving at extreme speeds, grossly excessive velocity, reckless speed in protected areas, and speeding combined with impairment.

What Insurers Argue

“The Speed Didn’t Actually Cause the Crash”

Insurers often concede the speeding but dispute causation. Defense says the wreck wasn’t speed-related. 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”

Defense counsel frequently raises shared blame. How OK handles shared fault may cut damages without barring them.

“The Speed Was Reasonable for Conditions”

Even when speed is admitted, adjusters say the limit shouldn’t apply. This argument can be countered with accident reconstruction.

Damages in Speeding Cases

Given the energy involved in high-speed collisions, damages can be substantial. Compensation can cover life-care planning for permanent injuries, wage damages, pain and suffering, loss of consortium in fatal cases, and exemplary damages in egregious cases.

Attorney Costs

Speeding accident attorneys charge no upfront fees. First meetings carry no charge.

Move Quickly on Evidence

Crash data has a limited preservation window. Physical evidence on the road disappears. Surveillance footage loops. Getting an attorney involved right away locks down the evidence before it disappears. The filing time limit also keeps running.

McKay Law Is Your Duncan 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 fallout can be life-shattering. The laws of physics are harsh: 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 develop speeding crash cases by pulling every piece of documentation that tells the actual story — black box and event data recorder downloads, traffic and surveillance footage, cell phone records, skid mark measurements, and witness accounts that nail down how fast the at-fault driver was really going. We partner with accident reconstruction experts to convert that data into a airtight picture of disregard a jury can understand.

Insurance companies will attempt to complicate things — suggesting you added to the crash, that your injuries predate the wreck, or that the speeding wasn’t actually the cause. When you come into 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 pursue 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 leaves behind. Phone us now at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to set up your free consultation and put a firm that won’t back down {on your side|in your corner|fighting for you|behind you,

Video Testimonials

The McKay Law Difference

See why so many others choose McKay Law, PLLC

With over 300 five-star reviews, McKay Law, your local Personal Injury Law Firm has earned the trust and gratitude of our clients. Every case we handle is unique, and every client’s story matters. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from our clients about their experiences and why they confidently recommend us to others.

All Our Practice Areas

Scroll to Top