“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Miami, OK Fatigued Driver Accident Lawyer

Drowsy driving kills thousands of people every year in Miami, OK. Driving on less than 5 hours of sleep doubles or triples crash risk—making it a leading and underreported cause of serious crashes. McKay Law fights for victims of fatigued driver crashes throughout OK. Fatigued driving particularly affects both ordinary motorists and commercial drivers under pressure to keep moving. Drowsy driving wrecks frequently cause catastrophic head-on collisions, single-vehicle rollovers, and rear-end crashes at highway speeds. A telltale sign of drowsy driving is the lack of skid marks or evasive maneuvers—because the driver was simply unconscious or unaware. Our Miami car accident attorneys use every tool to establish driver impairment from fatigue. We obtain critical evidence—electronic data, employment files, third-party witness testimony, and forensic analysis. 18-wheeler drowsy driving wrecks trigger FMCSA compliance issues—federal law mandates rest periods and maximum driving hours. When trucking companies pressure drivers to skip rest periods, they face significant liability. Potential defendants include the driver plus any company that contributed to or caused the fatigue. Victims often suffer TBIs, multiple fractures, life-altering disabilities, and fatalities. We fight for every dollar including hospital costs, ongoing treatment, missed income, suffering, and survivor damages. In cases of egregious fatigue, enhanced damages may apply. Insurance companies often deny that fatigue caused the crash—we don’t let them dodge responsibility. Every client we represent is handled on a contingency fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win. Don’t wait—employment records, ELD data, and other evidence can disappear quickly. Contact McKay Law today for a no-cost case review with a Miami, OK fatigued driver accident lawyer who will hold the fatigued driver and their employer accountable.

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Fatigued Driver Accident Lawyer in Miami, OK | McKay Law

Fatigued Driver Wreck Lawyer in Miami, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Fatigued Driver Accident Claim?

Drowsy driving is as dangerous as drunk driving but doesn’t get the same attention. Going 20 hours without sleep produces the same impairment as legal drunkenness. Yet drowsy driving remains widespread across many driver populations. When a fatigued driver causes a crash, the injured party can pursue compensation. McKay Law represents fatigued driver accident victims in Miami and in surrounding communities.

The Effects of Fatigue on Driving

  • Slowed reflexes
  • Poor judgment
  • Reduced attention and focus
  • Microsleeps (brief involuntary sleep episodes)
  • Complete loss of consciousness behind the wheel
  • Reduced visual field
  • Drifting between lanes
  • Aggression from fatigue
  • Memory and processing problems

Why Drivers Get Drowsy

  • Lack of sleep
  • Long-haul commercial trucking
  • Hours of service violations by truck drivers
  • Working irregular hours
  • Sleep disorders (sleep apnea, insomnia)
  • Drowsy-inducing drugs
  • Alcohol and drug use
  • Driving during natural sleep hours (midnight to 6 AM)
  • Long drives without breaks
  • Boredom and monotonous highways
  • Sleep debt

Common Types of Fatigued Driving Crashes

  • Single-vehicle run-off-road crashes
  • Head-on crashes
  • Rear-end crashes
  • Striking stationary vehicles or objects
  • Rollover crashes
  • Lane departure crashes
  • No-brake high-speed crashes

Typical Drowsy Driving Crash Injuries

Drowsy driving wrecks tend to be devastating because fatigued drivers often don’t brake or react:

  • Severe head trauma
  • Spinal cord injuries and paralysis
  • Compound fractures
  • Internal organ damage
  • Crush injuries
  • Traumatic amputations
  • Thermal injuries
  • Soft-tissue neck damage
  • Mental and emotional trauma
  • Wrongful death

Proving Driver Fatigue

Proving fatigue can be challenging. Important evidence includes:

  • Police reports
  • Statements by the driver
  • Eyewitness accounts
  • Surveillance and traffic camera footage
  • Records showing activity timing
  • Social media activity
  • EDR readouts showing no braking or evasive action
  • Absence of braking indicates fatigue
  • Electronic logging device records for truckers
  • Driver’s work schedule
  • Driver’s medical and sleep records
  • Records of driving time and distance

Trucking Industry Fatigue

Trucker fatigue is especially dangerous. Federal hours of service (HOS) regulations limit how long commercial drivers can drive:

  • Up to 11 hours driving per day
  • Maximum 14-hour on-duty period
  • Required 10-hour off-duty period between shifts
  • Weekly limits
  • Mandatory rest breaks

HOS violations strengthen liability evidence.

Potential Defendants

  • The fatigued driver
  • The driver’s employer in commercial driver cases
  • Trucking companies
  • Companies pressuring drivers
  • Healthcare providers negligently prescribed impairing medications
  • The car owner when ownership liability applies

What You Must Prove

  • A Duty of Care — There was a duty to drive without dangerous fatigue.
  • Violation of That Duty — The driver drove while fatigued.
  • That the Fatigue Caused the Crash — Fatigue led to the impact.
  • Concrete Harm — Economic and non-economic harm.

Recovery for Victims

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Ongoing rehabilitation expenses
  • Lost wages and loss of earning power
  • Damage to belongings
  • Physical and emotional suffering
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Loss of consortium
  • Survivor damages when the wreck was fatal
  • Punitive damages where conduct was reckless

Punitive Damages in Fatigued Driving Cases

Fatigued driving cases can support punitive damages particularly where:

  • Truckers violated HOS rules
  • Companies forcing drivers to violate safety rules
  • Drivers continued driving despite knowing they were dangerously fatigued
  • Drivers with diagnosed conditions affecting alertness

Filing Deadline

The deadline in Oklahoma is 2 years from the date of the crash to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Wrongful death actions carry the same 2-year deadline.

How McKay Law Approaches Fatigued Driving Cases

We get to work immediately to examine fatigue evidence, obtain HOS records for truckers, subpoena cell phone records and electronic data, engage crash specialists, pursue trucking company liability for HOS violations, map every available source of recovery, and prepare every case as if it will go to trial.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

A: Multiple evidence sources — police reports, vehicle data, trip records, and witness testimony.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing. No fee unless we recover.

Q: Can I sue a trucking company for a fatigued trucker?

A: Absolutely. Companies that violate or pressure violations of HOS rules can be held liable.

Q: The driver claims they weren’t tired — does that defeat my claim?

A: Definitely not. Driver denials don’t end the case — we develop fatigue evidence from many sources.

Q: Can I get punitive damages?

A: In some cases, yes. Reckless conduct supports punitive damages.

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

A: Don’t. Call us first.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 years from the date of the crash (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Don’t wait — trucking company records have retention limits.

Compensation After a Drowsy Driving Crash in Miami, OK

Drowsy driving causes as many crashes as drunk driving. Fatigue cases face unique evidentiary challenges. There’s no blood test for tiredness. An attorney familiar with fatigue-related crash claims knows how to build cases without the easy proof DUI cases enjoy.

Why Fatigue Is So Dangerous

Sleep Deprivation Mimics Alcohol Impairment

Research has documented that significant sleep deprivation produces impairment comparable to alcohol intoxication. Extended wakefulness mimics alcohol impairment.

Microsleeps

Brief involuntary sleep episodes — brief periods of involuntary sleep lasting seconds. Even brief microsleeps cover dangerous distances at speed.

Reduced Reaction Time

Fatigue dramatically slows reaction time.

Impaired Judgment

Drowsy drivers make worse decisions. Critical driving choices degrade.

Vision Effects

Fatigue affects vision in multiple ways. Vision problems compromise driving ability.

Categories of Fatigued Driving Cases

Commercial Driver Fatigue

CDL drivers have substantial fatigue exposure.

Federal HOS rules for commercial drivers to reduce drowsy driving.

HOS violations provide regulatory-based liability.

Shift Worker Fatigue

Night shift workers have disturbed circadian rhythms. Employer liability may apply for scheduling that creates dangerous fatigue.

Sleep Disorder Cases

Crashes involving drivers with sleep conditions represent a significant category.

Common sleep disorders include:

  • OSA
  • Chronic insomnia
  • Narcolepsy
  • RLS
  • Circadian disruption

Drivers with diagnosed but untreated conditions can face heightened liability.

Personal Fatigue

Drivers who chose to drive despite knowing they were dangerously tired face liability for their conduct.

Medication-Related Fatigue

Drug-induced drowsiness can intersect with both fatigue and drug-impaired driving claims.

How These Cases Get Proven

Circumstantial Evidence

Without a “fatigue test,” cases rely on circumstantial evidence.

Driver Activity Prior to the Crash

The driver’s activity before the crash becomes critical evidence.

Critical pre-crash documentation includes:

  • Hours awake before the crash
  • Whether the driver had been working
  • Recent sleep patterns
  • Whether the driver had been at parties or other late events
  • Medication history

Witness Observations

Pre-crash witnesses can describe signs of fatigue.

Observable signs of fatigue include:

  • Tired appearance
  • Frequent yawning
  • Glassy or unfocused eyes
  • Apparent inattention
  • Self-reported fatigue
  • Concerning behavior

Crash Characteristics

Crash dynamics indicate drowsy driving.

Fatigue indicators in crashes include:

  • Lone-vehicle crashes without explanation
  • No skid marks suggesting no braking attempt
  • Sleep-time crashes
  • Lane departure crashes
  • Highway crashes after long drives
  • No driver attempt to avoid the crash

Driver Statements

The driver’s own statements can be powerful evidence. Statements like “I just fell asleep” are direct admissions of fatigue.

Phone and Activity Records

Activity records reveal what the driver had been doing.

Vehicle Data

Vehicle event data recorders (EDRs) can reveal critical pre-crash information.

Federal HOS recorders document driver activity.

Medical Records

The driver’s medical records can show medication use.

Expert Testimony

Specialized expertise connect the evidence to fatigue.

Liability Beyond the Driver

Employers

Workplace-related fatigue claims in several scenarios.

Driving in the Course of Employment

When the employee was driving for work creates standard vicarious liability.

Scheduling-Induced Fatigue

Employers who scheduled the employee to work excessive hours can face direct liability.

Sleep Disorder Awareness

Employers who knew the employee had sleep disorders but didn’t address the issue can face direct liability.

Commercial Carriers

Commercial trucking companies face specific FMCSA-related liability:

  • Failing to ensure HOS compliance
  • Pressuring drivers to drive while fatigued
  • Fatigue-related training failures
  • Pre-hire sleep disorder screening

Sleep Disorder Healthcare Providers

For specific sleep disorder scenarios, inadequate medical management may face medical malpractice claims.

Common Insurance Defenses

“There’s No Proof of Fatigue”

The most common defense challenge the fatigue evidence. Building the case requires multiple evidence sources.

“The Driver Wasn’t Aware of Their Fatigue”

Defense argues the driver didn’t realize they were tired. This defense is generally weak because drivers have a duty to assess their fitness to drive.

“Other Factors Caused the Crash”

“Fatigue didn’t cause the crash”.

“Sleep Disorders Aren’t My Fault”

Health-condition defenses, defense sometimes argues the disorder is unavoidable. But drivers with knowledge of sleep disorders have a duty to avoid driving when impaired.

“Comparative Fault”

Defense pushes shared-fault arguments.

Punitive Damages Considerations

Extreme drowsy driving can support punitive damages. These cases involve:

  • Drivers who knowingly drove after 24+ hours awake
  • Commercial drivers who falsified HOS records
  • Sleep disorder defendants who drove anyway
  • Employers who pressured employees to drive while fatigued
  • Pattern of fatigue driving

Critical Steps After a Fatigued Driver Crash

Make Sure Police Investigate Fatigue

If you suspect the other driver was fatigued, tell the responding officers. Fatigue isn’t always investigated automatically.

Document Observable Signs of Fatigue

Tired appearance, yawning, drowsy demeanor support the case.

Note Statements From the Other Driver

“I just fell asleep” are powerful proof.

Identify Where the Driver Was Coming From

Where the driver was coming from can establish fatigue context.

Identify Pre-Crash Witnesses

Witnesses who saw the driver before the crash matter significantly.

Get a Police Report

Get the complete report.

Capture Vehicle and Phone Records

Via formal preservation demands, lock down the digital evidence.

Get Medical Attention Immediately

Prompt medical evaluation protects against later disputes.

Damages Available

Recoverable losses include:

  • Hospitalization, surgical, and rehabilitation costs
  • Lost wages
  • Permanent occupational limitations
  • Vehicle repair or replacement
  • Non-economic damages
  • Compensation for fatal crashes
  • Exemplary damages in cases involving egregious fatigue conduct

Attorney Costs

Fatigued driver accident attorneys earn fees only on recovery. Free initial consultations are standard.

Move Quickly

Multiple types of evidence have preservation windows. Witness recollections fade. Digital evidence need legal preservation steps. Electronic vehicle data may be lost. The legal time limit continues running. Engaging counsel right away positions the case for the recovery the available evidence makes possible.

McKay Law Is Your Miami Advocate After A Fatigued Driver Accident

A driver who hasn’t slept enough is, in many measurable ways, no less dangerous as a drunk one — and the accidents they cause are usually just as catastrophic. Studies have shown that being awake for 18 hours straight produces reaction-time problems comparable to a blood alcohol level of 0.05, and going 24 hours without sleep pushes that number past the legal limit for drunk driving. Even with that fact, drowsy drivers take the road every single day — commercial truckers running illegal hours, shift workers heading home after overnight shifts, parents of newborns, college students cramming for finals, and people pushing through long road trips without breaks. At McKay Law, we handle fatigued driving cases by requesting cell phone records, work and shift schedules, hours-of-service logs for commercial drivers, social media activity, fitness tracker and smartwatch sleep data, and witness accounts that expose exactly how long the at-fault driver had been awake when they struck you.

Fatigued driving cases often create the opportunity to additional defendants beyond the driver alone — especially when an employer squeezed a worker to drive after a long shift, when a trucking company ignored federal hours-of-service rules, or when a commercial carrier failed to implement mandatory rest requirements. When you become part of the McKay Law family, we examine every angle of liability and fight for every available source of recovery. We chase maximum compensation for emergency care, surgeries, hospitalization, ongoing rehabilitation, future medical needs, prescription costs, lost income, lost earning capacity, vehicle replacement, the ongoing hardship of living through a wreck caused by someone who should have pulled over and slept — and in the most heartbreaking cases, the wrongful death of a loved one. Call us without waiting at (866) 679-9651 or contact us online to set up your free consultation and get a firm that has mastered how to uncover fatigued driving behind you.

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