Rear-end crashes in Tacoma can lead to serious injuries that change your life in drastic ways. When another party is at fault, complex questions come up, like “Can I sue?” or “Should I hire an attorney?” Rear-end cases also get contested more than most people expect, even when the crash seems straightforward. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. in Tacoma has more than 20 years of experience fighting for justice and maximum compensation for injury victims. Speak to a lawyer with years of experience in rear-end accident cases by calling (253) 383-4500 for a free case review.
Rear-end crashes don’t all look the same once you get past the first police report. A two-car hit at a light creates one set of issues, and a chain reaction on I-5 creates another. Some of the scenarios that create a viable case are:
A crash doesn’t need to fit a perfect category to deserve a serious review.
Rear-end accident cases reward detail. Small gaps, mixed timelines, and sloppy records cost money, so our car accident lawyers build the case around clear proof that lines up across the collision report, the photos, the medical chart, and wage records, and we keep that proof organized so the story stays consistent from start to finish.
Insurance adjusters reach out soon after a rear-end crash because they want your words on record before you’ve had a chance to get evaluated and see how symptoms develop. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. takes over that contact so you don’t get cornered into a recorded statement, a broad medical release, or a quick settlement that closes the door on treatment you still need.
Once you hire us, we route communication through our office, we put key facts in writing, and we stop the other side from fishing through your history or pressing you for answers that don’t help you.
Adjusters ask questions that sound simple, then they use the answers to argue about your timeline, your symptoms, or your credibility. Our office handles those requests and keeps statements limited to what helps your case.
Broad releases let the other side pull records that have nothing to do with the crash, then they point to old notes to argue the crash didn’t cause your symptoms. We keep releases narrow and tied to the injuries from the rear-end crash.
Quick money can feel helpful when bills stack up, but releases can end the case before you know the full cost of treatment and time away from work. We review offers with you, explain the tradeoffs in plain language, and respond for you.
Rear-end crashes feel clear when you lived it, but the other side can still try to push blame onto you to pay less. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. treats fault like a facts problem, so the case stays tied to what happened on the road, not the version an adjuster wants to record.
RCW 46.61.145 requires drivers to follow at a reasonable and prudent distance based on speed and traffic. Rear-end cases start with the driver behind you, but the other side can still argue exceptions, so braking, spacing, and traffic flow need to stay consistent across the evidence.
Sudden-stop claims show up in rear-end cases because “you stopped too fast” sounds believable on a phone call. Normal braking happens every day in Tacoma traffic, so the question turns into what caused the braking and whether the driver behind you left enough space to react.
Lane-change disputes pop up when the other side says you moved in front of them and forced the impact. Clear timing becomes the key issue, so we look for anything that shows distance, speed, and whether the driver behind you had time to slow down without hitting you.
Brake light arguments show up when the other side wants an equipment issue to share blame. Photos from the scene, repair records, and vehicle inspections can confirm whether a light actually failed or whether the allegation showed up later as a bargaining tactic.
RCW 4.22.005 uses comparative fault, which means any percentage placed on you reduces what you can recover. A 10% blame finding cuts a $100,000 case to $90,000, and a 25% blame finding cuts it to $75,000, so we push back on blame claims to change the math in a direct way.
Rear-end injuries don’t always show up in the ER. Neck pain, back pain, headaches, dizziness, and foggy thinking can build over a few days, then the insurance company points to that delay as a reason to question the link to the crash.
A delay in symptoms doesn’t mean the injury came from somewhere else. Delayed pain shows up in rear-end crashes because soft tissue irritation and inflammation can build, and people also stay keyed up after a crash and notice problems once normal life resumes.
Medical notes carry weight because the other side treats the chart as the most reliable version of what you reported. Vague notes, inconsistent symptom descriptions, and missing details about limits at work or home can make the injury look smaller than it feels.
Strong records stay consistent across visits and tie symptoms to the crash in a clear way. Objective findings help when available, including range-of-motion limits, spasms, positive neuro signs, or imaging that supports disc or joint issues, and clear timing in the chart helps keep the record consistent.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. lines up the collision timeline with the medical timeline, then we use the records to show how symptoms developed and how they affected your daily life. Careful alignment of the timelines keeps the case grounded and reduces gaps the other side will try to use against you.
A rear-end case needs a number tied to what the crash cost you, not a number picked to close the case cheaply.
Insurance adjusters reach out soon after a rear-end crash because they want your words on record before you’ve had a chance to get evaluated and see how symptoms develop. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. takes over that contact so you don’t get cornered into a recorded statement, a broad medical release, or a quick settlement that closes the door on treatment you still need.
Once you hire us, we route communication through our office, we put key facts in writing, and we stop the other side from fishing through your history or pressing you for answers that don’t help you.
Recorded statements can sound routine, but adjusters ask questions in a way that can turn your answers into an argument about your timeline, your symptoms, or your credibility. Our office handles those requests and keeps statements limited to what helps your case.
Broad medical releases can pull records that have nothing to do with the crash, and the other side can point to old notes to argue the rear-end crash didn’t cause the problem. We keep releases narrow and tied to the injuries from the rear-end crash.
Quick offers can come with a release that ends the case before you know the full cost of treatment and time away from work. We review offers with you, explain the tradeoffs in plain language, and respond for you.
Low liability limits can cap recovery even when fault looks clear, so part of the work is figuring out what coverage exists and what it can pay.
PIP can pay initial medical bills and wage loss, and reimbursement issues can show up later depending on how the case resolves.
Underinsured motorist coverage can apply when the at-fault policy won’t cover the loss, which can change the path of the case.
Multi-vehicle crashes add another layer because more than one policy may apply, and the details decide which coverage pays and in what order.
We review the policies in play, confirm limits, and track down every coverage path that can apply, then we push back when the other side tries to hide behind limits or dodge responsibility.
Rear-end crashes with a city vehicle or a transit bus come with extra steps that don’t apply in a standard case, and missing one of those steps can shut the case down before it gets started.
A case against a public agency has notice requirements that come before a lawsuit, and a mandatory waiting period applies after the notice gets served. Notice requirements change the schedule for the case, so the first priority becomes getting the notice right and getting it served the right way.
Key details let us identify the correct agency and start the notice process without delays. The most helpful information is the date and location of the crash, the vehicle number or route information if you have it, the driver name if it was provided, and any photos that show the vehicle markings.
The notice and waiting period run before a lawsuit can be started, so the case moves on a different clock than a standard rear-end case. We handle the notice work, track the deadlines, and keep the case moving so you don’t lose time to avoidable procedural issues.
Settlement talks can stop when the other side refuses to respond to the records, keeps repeating the same excuses, or refuses to offer money that matches the loss. A lawsuit puts deadlines on the process and forces the other side to deal with the evidence.
A case starts with filing the lawsuit, then the other side gets served and has a set time to respond. After that, both sides exchange information, schedule depositions, and line up the records needed to prove fault and damages, and the court sets a schedule that moves the case forward.
Pierce County uses mandatory arbitration for certain cases under a certain dollar amount, which usually leads to a quicker decision without a full trial. Arbitration still requires preparation, since evidence and medical records still decide the outcome, and the result can affect settlement pressure afterward.
Discovery covers written questions, document requests, and depositions, and the other side may request a medical exam through a doctor they choose. We prepare you for each step, go over the likely questions, and make sure the exam stays within the proper scope, so the process doesn’t turn into a fishing trip.
Trial preparation starts long before a trial date, since the case needs organized records, clear witness testimony, and expert support when needed. We prepare cases so they can be tried, even if the case resolves beforehand, because the other side takes the case more seriously when it sees trial readiness.
A first call should feel simple. You tell us what happened, we ask a few focused questions, and you leave the call with a clear sense of whether the facts support a case and what the next step looks like.
A full packet isn’t required. A few basics help us give you a straight answer.
Questions on the call track the parts of a rear-end case that usually control the outcome. We ask about the crash setup, symptom timing, medical care to date, and insurance details, and each answer helps us work through liability issues, proof problems, and coverage limits.
If we take the case, we will fight for justice and the maximum compensation allowed so you can focus on healing and rebuilding. Call Freeman Law Firm, Inc. at (253) 383-4500 for a free case review.
