Tennessee truck accident attorney reviewing trucking company evidence preserved through a spoliation letter.

Trucking companies have access to crucial evidence after a collision. Unfortunately, for a variety of reasons, the evidence may not survive long enough to support your claim against the truck driver or their employer.

The good news is that an experienced attorney can help secure and preserve relevant evidence before it goes missing. Here is how your lawyer might use a spoliation letter for a truck accident in Tennessee. Call our office today to talk through your case.

What Is a Spoliation Letter?

A spoliation letter is a formal notice that a truck accident lawyer sends to a trucking company or another party, requiring them to preserve specific materials and electronic data that could affect a personal injury claim. The evidence may include truck driver logs, black box data, inspection records, maintenance records, dash camera footage, and hiring or training documents, for example.

Sending a spoliation letter can be a key step in truck accident evidence preservation in Tennessee.

Why Timing Matters for Truck Accident Evidence in Tennessee

Truck accident evidence can disappear within a short time after a wreck. For example:

  • Normal business operations may lead to the overwriting of electronic logging data.
  • Dash camera footage may be deleted due to a short retention cycle.
  • Black box data can be lost if the truck is repaired, returned to service, or salvaged before the vehicle is inspected.
  • Paper records may be routinely destroyed or lost through poor recordkeeping or internal errors.

That is why it is so important to act quickly to secure a spoliation letter after a truck accident. A spoliation letter puts the company on notice that it must preserve certain evidence. It may even identify exact categories of material to preserve, such as onboard data, maintenance files, driver qualification records, and post-crash inspection results.

The sooner your attorney sends an evidence preservation letter in a trucking case, the stronger the likelihood of preserving evidence that could determine the outcome of your claim.

What Happens If a Trucking Company Destroys Evidence?

A trucking company can face significant financial losses if it or its driver caused an accident that injured someone else. As a result, they may be powerfully motivated to delete, tamper with, or destroy evidence that could implicate them, even if that just amounts to applying their usual standards for data preservation and retention.

If a trucking company destroys evidence after receiving a spoliation letter, it can make proving the company’s or the driver’s liability much more challenging. Missing records may make it harder to show what the driver did, how the company maintained the truck, or whether the company followed safety rules.

A company may face court-imposed penalties for destroying or tampering with evidence, which can affect how your claim moves forward. A judge may allow arguments about the missing evidence and why it matters. The destruction of evidence may also raise questions about whether the company was trying to keep damaging facts out of view.

Contact The Terry Law Firm to Protect Your Tennessee Truck Accident Claim

The urgency of preserving key evidence is just one reason to reach out to our Tennessee truck accident attorneys as soon as possible after a collision. When you turn to The Terry Law Firm following a crash, we will get to work right away on investigating the accident and, if necessary, present a spoliation letter to preserve critical evidence.

Contact us right away to get started with a free consultation.

Trial attorney F. Braxton “Brack” Terry focuses his law practice on representing injured people in a wide range of personal injury claims, including cases involving truck crashes, car accidents, defective products, premises liability, and more. His efforts have secured significant verdicts and settlements, including over $20 million for a large group of plaintiffs, and recoveries of $5.3 million, $4.1 million, $3.6 million, $3.1 million, $2.49 million, and high-six-figure amounts for individuals.

Brack has received numerous professional honors from prestigious organizations. Most recently, he was named “Lawyer of the Year” by Best Lawyers® for Personal Injury Litigation in Knoxville in 2026. He has been listed in Best Lawyers® every year since 2013 and by Super Lawyers since 2009. Brack has been a member of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum since 2007.

Brack earned his law degree from the Nashville School of Law in 1996. In addition to membership in the Tennessee Bar, he is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit. Brack is a member of many professional organizations, such as the Tennessee Trial Lawyers Association, the American Association for Justice, and the Interstate Truck Litigation Group.

Admitted to Tennessee Bar: 1996
Years of Legal Experience: 30
Listed in The Best Lawyers in America®: 2013-Present
Listed as a Mid-South Super Lawyer: 2009-Present