Any type of car crash should be taken seriously and attended to in the proper manner. In some cases, car accidents could be minor affairs in which individuals are unharmed, and in other instances, there could be devastating outcomes with serious injuries and deaths being among those outcomes. If an individual is involved in such a crash, he or she may wish to consider possible legal avenues.
It was recently reported that a serious accident in Oklahoma left one individual dead. Reports stated that there was only one vehicle involved in the wreck, and there were at least three people inside at the time. The driver was reported as being a 25-year-old woman, and she was apparently unable to keep the vehicle on the roadway. As a result, the car left the road and collided with a tree.
The three occupants were trapped inside the vehicle for two hours, and all suffered injuries. A 25-year-old male passenger was fatally injured, and he was declared deceased at the accident site. The driver and second passenger were airlifted from the scene to the hospital where they were considered to be in serious conditions. Authorities were still investigating the incident at the time of the report.
1646 S Denver Ave.
Tulsa, OK 74119
Telephone: (918) 583-6007
Fax: (918) 583-6602
We serve clients throughout Oklahoma's Green Country including those in the following localities: Adair County, Cherokee County, Craig County, Creek County, Delaware County, Mayes County, McIntosh County, Muskogee County, Nowata County, Okfuskee County, Okmulgee County, Osage County, Ottawa County, Pawnee County, Rogers County, Sequoyah County, Tulsa County, Wagoner County, and Washington County
Tulsa Personal Injury Lawyer | Tulsa County, Oklahoma Accident Attorney | Hawkins Law Firm
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Please do not include any confidential or sensitive information in a contact form, text message, or voicemail. The contact form sends information by non-encrypted email, which is not secure. Submitting a contact form, sending a text message, making a phone call, or leaving a voicemail does not create an attorney-client relationship.