“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Norman, OK Electrocution Accident Lawyer

Electrical injuries can cause devastating, life-altering harm in Norman, OK. When safety failures lead to electrical contact, victims may suffer lifelong effects. McKay Law advocates for electrocution accident victims throughout OK. These accidents can cause severe burns at entry and exit points, internal organ damage from current passing through the body, cardiac arrest, neurological damage, traumatic brain injuries, spinal injuries, falls from elevated positions, vision and hearing loss, and wrongful death. Electrical injuries are unique because current passing through the body can cause hidden, severe damage well beyond the entry point—requiring specialized burn and trauma care. Electrical injuries are often caused by faulty wiring, defective electrical products, exposed power lines, unmarked or buried utility lines, contact with overhead power lines, damaged extension cords, missing ground fault interrupters (GFCIs), wet conditions near electrical equipment, and inadequate safety training. Construction and industrial workers face significant electrical risks—particularly when employers fail to follow OSHA safety standards. Liable parties may include property owners, electrical contractors, utility companies, product manufacturers, employers (through third-party claims), general contractors, equipment manufacturers, and landlords who failed to maintain safe wiring. Workplace electrocution cases may give rise to multiple legal pathways—we pursue every avenue for compensation. Our Norman electrical injury lawyers investigate every angle—the physical evidence, inspection documentation, and any prior complaints about the electrical condition. We work with electrical engineers, fire investigators, code compliance experts, and medical specialists to establish causation and liability. Victims often suffer catastrophic injuries requiring decades of medical treatment. We recover all available damages including hospital costs, reconstructive surgery, ongoing therapy, lost income, suffering, and survivor damages. Every client we represent is handled on a no-win, no-fee basis—no fees unless we recover. Contact McKay Law today for a no-cost case review with a Norman, OK electrocution accident lawyer who will fight for the full recovery you deserve.

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Electrocution Accident Lawyer in Norman, OK | McKay Law

Electrocution Injury Legal Counsel in Norman, OK | McKay Law

The Basics of Electrocution Cases

Electrocution is one of the most devastating injuries possible. Electrical current passing through the body produces cardiac arrest, internal burns, organ failure, and often death. Survivors typically have lasting damage including amputations, brain damage, chronic pain, and psychological trauma. The state’s industrial activity and infrastructure create significant electrocution risks. McKay Law advocates for electrocution accident victims in Norman and throughout Oklahoma.

Common Causes of Electrocution

  • Touching or coming near high-voltage power lines
  • Downed line contact
  • Faulty appliances, tools, or machinery
  • Improperly installed or maintained wiring
  • Grounding failures
  • Pools, hot tubs, or wet locations with electrical defects
  • Contact with underground utilities
  • Defective ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCIs)
  • Construction site hazards
  • Workplace electrical hazards
  • Appliance defects
  • Lightning strikes (when negligence is involved)
  • Stray voltage

Common Locations for Electrocution Accidents

  • Building sites
  • Energy industry workplaces
  • Industrial workplaces
  • Power lines and transformers
  • Water-based recreation
  • Residential properties
  • Commercial properties
  • Public properties with electricity
  • Amusement facilities
  • Restaurants with electrical equipment
  • Farm operations

Typical Electrocution Injuries

  • Cardiac arrest
  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Severe burns (entry and exit wounds)
  • Burns below the skin
  • Internal injuries
  • Brain and nerve damage
  • Brain injuries
  • Spine injuries
  • Amputations
  • Muscle and tendon damage
  • Renal injury
  • Damage to vision or hearing
  • Long-term eye injuries
  • Fall-related injuries after shock
  • Psychological trauma
  • Long-term pain
  • Wrongful death

What Makes Electrocution Different

  • Internal damage often worse than external
  • Electricity travels through the body
  • Delayed onset of some injuries
  • Frequently fatal
  • Long-term cardiac problems
  • Permanent brain and nervous system effects
  • Often combined with falls and secondary injuries

Who Pays

  • Property owners
  • Rental property owners
  • Utility companies
  • Construction contractors
  • Electrician contractors
  • Manufacturers of defective electrical products
  • Appliance makers
  • Workplaces
  • Companies servicing electrical systems
  • Municipal utilities
  • Building inspectors

When You Can Sue

If you were electrocuted at work:

  • Comp benefits typically apply
  • You generally cannot sue your direct employer
  • But third-party claims against other parties may be available

Potential third-party defendants include:

  • Property owners (not your employer)
  • General contractors in subcontractor cases
  • Equipment manufacturers
  • Different contractors at the same site
  • Utility company defendants

Elements of Your Claim

  • A Duty of Care — A legal duty applied.
  • Breach — Safety standards weren’t met.
  • Causation — The negligence produced the harm.
  • Concrete Harm — Medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and other losses.

Evidence That Wins Electrocution Cases

  • Photographs of the scene and equipment
  • The actual equipment that caused the electrocution
  • Electrical inspection records
  • Service records
  • Permit history
  • Product records
  • Recall records
  • Records of previous incidents
  • Workplace safety records
  • Expert engineering and electrical analysis
  • Treatment documentation
  • Medical examiner records in fatal cases
  • Witness statements
  • Utility company records

Recovery for Electrocution Victims

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Lifetime care costs
  • Burn treatment costs
  • Long-term heart treatment
  • Neurological care costs
  • Lost income and reduced earning capacity
  • Non-economic damages
  • The toll on daily life
  • Long-term disability and disfigurement
  • Loss of consortium
  • Survivor damages in fatal cases
  • Exemplary damages where defendants knew of hazards or violated safety standards

Filing Deadline

The deadline in Oklahoma is 2 years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Workers’ comp has separate time limits. Quick action is critical because physical evidence — equipment and scene — must be preserved before changes or repairs destroy it.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We get to work immediately to secure physical evidence, engage specialized electrical experts, investigate every party in the chain — property owner, contractor, manufacturer, utility, secure all relevant documentation, partner with healthcare providers, manage both comp and third-party recovery, and build each file for the courtroom from the start.

Common Questions

Q: Who is liable when someone is electrocuted at work?

A: Workers’ comp covers the employer. Third-party claims may exist against equipment makers, property owners, or other contractors.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero upfront. No recovery, no fee.

Q: My family member died from electrocution — what can we do?

A: Wrongful death cases are available for fatal electrocution. Survivors can pursue wrongful death recovery.

Q: I was electrocuted by a defective product — can I sue?

A: Definitely. Defective product cases support strong recovery.

Q: Should I preserve the equipment that caused the electrocution?

A: Critical. Don’t let anyone repair, alter, or dispose of it before we inspect.

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

A: Don’t. Call us first.

Q: Can I sue the utility company?

A: Yes, in qualifying cases. Utilities can be liable for power line incidents, equipment failures, or negligent maintenance.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Act fast — physical evidence must be preserved.

Electrocution Accident Claims in Norman, OK

Electrical injuries are deceptive. External burns rarely reflect the true scope of harm. The current passes through internal tissues. A local attorney experienced with electrical injury claims understands the medical reality of electrical injuries.

Terminology Matters: Electrocution vs. Electrical Shock

Electrocution and electrical shock aren’t quite the same thing. “Electrocution” properly means electrical death. Non-fatal electrical injuries refers to non-fatal electrical injuries.

For practical purposes in personal injury law, the term covers all electrical injuries.

Why Electrical Injuries Are So Distinctive

Internal Damage Beyond Visible Burns

Electricity travels through internal tissues. Visible contact wounds may show small entry burns while internal organs and tissues are seriously damaged.

Electricity travels through nerves, blood vessels, and other conductive tissues. Internal damage can be distant from visible burns.

Delayed Symptom Onset

Delayed presentation is common. Various time-delayed effects develop on different timelines.

This delayed-onset pattern makes medical evaluation immediately after any electrical incident essential.

High Mortality and Disability Rates

Survival doesn’t mean recovery — long-term effects are common.

Common Injuries From Electrical Accidents

Cardiac Effects

Current affecting the heart can cause immediate cardiac arrest. Even non-fatal cardiac effects create chronic cardiac problems.

Neurological Damage

The nervous system sustains significant damage from electrical current. Effects can include peripheral neuropathy.

Burns

Surface burns at entry and exit points are the recognized injuries. But internal burns from heat generated by the current cause widespread internal damage.

Rhabdomyolysis and Kidney Failure

Electrical-induced muscle breakdown can produce massive muscle breakdown. This can cause kidney failure.

Compartment Syndrome

Tissue swelling from internal damage can cause compartment syndrome.

Fractures and Soft Tissue Injuries

Tetanic muscle contraction that can produce fractures.

Eye Damage

Visual system damage can develop following electrical injuries.

Psychological Trauma

Mental health consequences are common after serious electrical injuries.

Common Scenarios That Lead to Electrocution Cases

Workplace Electrical Injuries

Industrial settings produce a substantial number of electrocution cases. These cases involve:

  • Power line contact during construction
  • Faulty electrical installations
  • LOTO failures
  • Defective electrical tools
  • Grounding failures

Construction Site Power Line Contact

Construction equipment contacting overhead power lines is a particularly devastating crash pattern.

Residential Electrical Accidents

Home electrical accidents can cause serious injuries. These cases involve inadequate grounding.

Swimming Pool Electrocution

Improperly wired pool equipment can electrocute swimmers.

Utility Worker Injuries

Electrical utility workers face inherent occupational risks.

Defective Products

Defective electrical products can cause electrical injuries.

Public Utility Infrastructure

Damaged transformers produce catastrophic incidents.

Who Can Be Held Liable?

Property Owners

For electrical incidents on private property implicate the property owner.

Employers

Job-site electrical incidents, workers’ comp generally applies. Non-employer claims can supplement workers’ compensation recovery.

Electricians and Electrical Contractors

Electrical work professionals may bear responsibility.

Equipment Manufacturers

Manufacturers of defective electrical products face design and manufacturing defect claims.

Utility Companies

Electric utility providers carry exposure for failure to de-energize lines for known dangers.

Construction Contractors

Project contractors can face liability for electrical safety failures at construction sites.

Engineers and Designers

Design professionals can face liability for design-level failures.

Government Entities

For incidents involving public utilities or government property require government tort claim procedures.

Distinct Legal Frameworks

Workers’ Compensation

Job-site electrical accidents, workers’ compensation generally provides the primary recovery path. Workers’ comp provides disability benefits.

Workers’ compensation typically bars claims against the employer but doesn’t bar claims against third parties. Third-party recovery often vastly outweighs workers’ comp benefits.

OSHA Violations

Workplace electrical incidents, OSHA violations provide direct evidence of negligence.

NESC and NEC

The National Electrical Safety Code (NESC) and National Electrical Code (NEC) establish the standard of care for electrical installations. Code non-compliance create code-violation liability.

Product Liability

For product-related electrical injuries, product-based liability opens additional liability paths.

Common Insurance Defenses

“The Plaintiff Caused Their Own Injury”

“You did it to yourself”. In professional electrical contexts, assumption of risk arguments arise.

“The Injury Was Foreseeable Risk of the Activity”

Inherent risk arguments can arise.

“Inadequate Safety Equipment Wasn’t Our Responsibility”

Blame-shifting between defendants.

“The Injury Isn’t As Severe As Claimed”

Defense disputes injury extent. The hidden nature of electrical injuries makes this defense common.

Critical Evidence in Electrocution Cases

Immediate Medical Documentation

Comprehensive post-incident medical assessment forms the case foundation. Baseline diagnostic studies establish the medical record.

Long-Term Medical Monitoring

Tracking late-developing complications reveals the actual extent of harm.

Expert Medical Testimony

Medical experts in electrical injury can establish the connection between the electrical exposure and subsequent symptoms.

Electrical and Engineering Experts

Electrical engineers and forensic specialists can establish how the electrical contact occurred.

Scene Investigation

Photos and documentation of the electrical contact. Scene-level evidence disappears fast.

Equipment Preservation

The electrical equipment or installation needs to be locked down before repair or replacement.

Worker Training Records

Where workplace electrical injury is involved, Safety program documentation matter significantly.

Critical Steps After an Electrical Injury

Get Immediate Medical Attention

Even with apparently mild contact, emergency medical care is critical. Delayed complications make this non-negotiable.

Don’t Let Anyone Repair the Equipment

The electrical system involved requires preservation. Changes to the electrical evidence eliminate critical evidence.

Photograph the Scene

Visual evidence of every relevant detail.

Identify Witnesses

Independent observers.

Document All Symptoms

Including symptoms that develop later when they emerge.

File OSHA Complaints if Applicable

In employment contexts, Federal workplace safety reports can be filed.

Contact an Attorney Quickly

For the various legal proceedings these cases may involve.

Damages Available

Electrical injury damages can be substantial include:

  • Past and future medical expenses (often extensive)
  • Long-term medical monitoring
  • Career-affecting wage damages
  • Reduced ability to work
  • Pain and suffering
  • Disfigurement and scarring
  • Mental health treatment
  • Compensation for fatal incidents
  • Enhanced damages where safety violations were severe

Attorney Costs

Electrocution attorneys earn fees only on recovery. These cases require significant investment in medical and engineering experts advanced by the firm.

Move Quickly

These cases depend on evidence that disappears fast. Equipment can be repaired or replaced within hours or days. Documenting evolving symptoms takes time. The legal time limit sets a hard cutoff. Getting an attorney involved promptly locks down the evidence.

McKay Law Is Your Norman Advocate After A Electrocution Accident

Electricity is hidden until the moment it isn’t — and by then, the damage is typically life-altering. Electric shock can occur on a construction site when a crane swings into a power line, in a home when faulty wiring sends current through an appliance, at a workplace where electrical equipment was never properly grounded, in an apartment complex with code violations that landlords ignored for years, or on the job for utility workers, electricians, and laborers whose employers failed to enforce lockout-tagout procedures. The injuries that follow are unlike any others: deep internal burns that travel through tissue while leaving the skin seeming relatively unharmed, cardiac arrhythmias, neurological damage, vision and hearing loss, broken bones from being thrown by the shock, and long-term complications that reveal themselves weeks or months later. At McKay Law, we tackle electrocution cases by partnering with electrical engineers, OSHA experts, burn specialists, and accident reconstructionists who can nail down the exact failure — a missing ground, a defective product, a code violation, a contractor’s shortcut — and link it directly to the parties responsible.

These cases commonly involve multiple defendants: property owners, general contractors and subcontractors, utility companies, equipment manufacturers, electricians, and any business or landlord whose negligence created the hazard. When you come into the McKay Law family, we uncover every angle of liability and waste no time to capture inspection reports, OSHA filings, permit records, equipment service histories, and the scene itself before repairs erase the evidence. We demand full compensation for emergency response and burn unit care, surgeries and skin grafts, cardiac and neurological treatment, ongoing rehabilitation, future medical needs, mobility aids and home modifications, lost wages, loss of livelihood, the lasting damage that often follows electrical burns, the enduring pain and emotional trauma of surviving an injury like this — and in the most tragic cases, the wrongful death of someone you cared deeply for. Contact us right away at (866) 679-9651 or connect with us online to arrange your free consultation and get a firm that knows how to take on negligent owners, contractors, and manufacturers on your side.

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