A Phoenix motorcycle accident wrongful death lawyer helps families recover compensation when a loved one is killed in a motorcycle crash caused by someone else’s negligence. These attorneys investigate the accident, identify all liable parties, calculate the full value of the family’s losses, negotiate with insurance companies, and file wrongful death lawsuits on behalf of surviving family members to secure financial recovery and justice.
Losing a family member in a motorcycle accident is devastating. Beyond the grief and emotional trauma, families face immediate financial pressures from medical bills, funeral costs, and the loss of income their loved one provided. While no amount of money can replace the person you lost, Arizona law provides a path for families to hold negligent parties accountable and recover damages that address both economic losses and the profound emotional impact of wrongful death. Understanding how wrongful death claims work in motorcycle accident cases helps families make informed decisions during an incredibly difficult time. The legal process requires specific evidence, adherence to strict deadlines, and skilled negotiation with insurance companies that often try to minimize payouts or deny claims entirely.
If you lost a family member in a Phoenix motorcycle accident, Life Justice Law Group offers compassionate legal representation to help your family pursue the compensation you deserve. We handle wrongful death claims on a contingency basis, which means your family pays no attorney fees unless we win your case. Call us at (480) 378-8088 or complete our online form for a free consultation and case evaluation.
What Constitutes Wrongful Death in a Phoenix Motorcycle Accident
Wrongful death occurs when a person dies as a direct result of another party’s negligence, recklessness, or intentional misconduct. In the context of motorcycle accidents, wrongful death claims arise when a motorcyclist is killed due to the dangerous actions or failures of another driver, road authority, vehicle manufacturer, or other responsible party.
Under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-611, a wrongful death claim can be filed when someone’s death was caused by a wrongful act that would have entitled the deceased person to file a personal injury lawsuit had they survived. This means the death must have resulted from legally actionable negligence or wrongdoing, not simply from an unavoidable accident. Common examples include a car driver failing to yield right of way to a motorcycle, driving under the influence and striking a motorcyclist, or a trucking company allowing a fatigued driver to operate a commercial vehicle that collides with a motorcycle.
The claim is distinct from a criminal case. Even if the at-fault party faces criminal charges for vehicular manslaughter or DUI-related homicide, families can still pursue a separate civil wrongful death lawsuit to recover financial compensation. Criminal proceedings focus on punishing the offender, while civil wrongful death claims focus on providing financial recovery to the surviving family members who suffered tangible losses.
Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Phoenix Motorcycle Accidents
Arizona law specifies exactly who has legal standing to file a wrongful death claim after a motorcycle accident. Only certain family members are permitted to bring this type of lawsuit, and the order of priority matters when multiple eligible parties exist.
Under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-612, the deceased person’s surviving spouse holds the exclusive right to file a wrongful death claim during the first 180 days after the death. If the deceased was married at the time of death, the spouse is the only party who can initiate legal action during this initial six-month period, even if other family members also suffered losses. This exclusive window gives the spouse time to make decisions without interference from other relatives who might have different priorities or approaches to the case.
If no spouse exists or if the spouse does not file a claim within the first 180 days, the right to file passes to the deceased person’s surviving children. All children of the deceased have equal standing to bring the claim, whether they are biological children, adopted children, or stepchildren who were financially dependent on the deceased. If multiple children exist and disagree about whether to pursue a claim or how to handle it, Arizona courts typically require them to act together or appoint a representative to handle the lawsuit on behalf of all siblings.
When there is no surviving spouse or children, the deceased person’s parents can file the wrongful death claim. This applies even if the deceased was an adult at the time of death. Parents who lost an adult child in a motorcycle accident have standing to seek compensation for their emotional suffering and loss of companionship, as well as any financial support their child provided to them.
If none of these relatives exist or if all eligible parties choose not to file within the statute of limitations, Arizona law allows the personal representative of the deceased person’s estate to file the claim. This personal representative is typically named in the deceased person’s will or appointed by the probate court if no will exists.
Common Causes of Fatal Motorcycle Accidents in Phoenix
Phoenix motorcycle accidents that result in death typically involve specific dangerous behaviors and hazardous conditions that create extreme risk for motorcyclists who have less physical protection than occupants of enclosed vehicles.
Left-turn collisions at intersections are among the most deadly scenarios for motorcyclists in Phoenix. These crashes occur when a car or truck driver makes a left turn directly into the path of an oncoming motorcycle, either failing to see the motorcycle entirely or severely misjudging its speed and distance. The motorcycle strikes the side of the turning vehicle at high speed, ejecting the rider and causing catastrophic injuries that prove fatal even when the rider wears a helmet. Arizona Revised Statutes § 28-772 requires drivers to yield the right of way to oncoming traffic when making left turns, but violations of this law are frequent and deadly.
Rear-end collisions happen when distracted or inattentive drivers fail to notice that traffic ahead has slowed or stopped. A motorcycle stopped at a red light or in slow-moving traffic can be crushed between the striking vehicle and the vehicle ahead, or the rider can be thrown forward with tremendous force. These accidents are often fatal because the rider has no protection from the impact and no time to react or attempt evasive maneuvers.
Lane-change accidents occur when drivers merge or change lanes without checking their blind spots or adequately scanning for motorcycles. The car or truck sidesipes the motorcycle or forces the rider off the road, causing the rider to lose control and crash. On Phoenix highways where speeds are high, even minor contact between a vehicle and motorcycle can result in the rider being thrown onto the roadway and run over by other vehicles.
Impaired driving remains a leading cause of fatal motorcycle accidents in Phoenix. Drivers under the influence of alcohol or drugs have delayed reaction times, impaired judgment, and reduced ability to maintain lane position or judge distances. When an impaired driver strikes a motorcycle, the results are often catastrophic because the impaired driver may not brake or attempt to avoid the collision at all, resulting in maximum-force impact.
Parties Who May Be Liable in Phoenix Motorcycle Wrongful Death Cases
Determining liability in a fatal motorcycle accident requires a thorough investigation to identify everyone whose negligence contributed to the death. Multiple parties can share responsibility, and holding all negligent parties accountable maximizes the compensation available to the family.
At-Fault Drivers
The most common liable party is the driver whose negligence directly caused the motorcycle accident. This includes drivers who violate traffic laws by running red lights, speeding, following too closely, making unsafe lane changes, or failing to yield right of way to motorcyclists. Under Arizona’s comparative negligence law found in Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-2505, even if the motorcyclist shares some fault for the accident, the family can still recover damages as long as the motorcyclist was not 100 percent at fault. The driver’s liability extends to all damages the family suffers, including medical expenses incurred before death, funeral costs, lost income, and emotional suffering.
Vehicle Owners
Arizona holds vehicle owners liable for accidents caused by drivers operating their vehicles with permission, even if the owner was not present during the crash. This legal principle applies when someone lends their car or truck to a friend or family member who then causes a fatal motorcycle accident. The vehicle owner’s insurance policy typically provides coverage for these accidents, giving families an additional source of compensation beyond the at-fault driver’s personal assets.
Employers and Trucking Companies
When a commercial vehicle strikes and kills a motorcyclist, the driver’s employer can be held liable under the legal doctrine of respondeat superior. This applies when the driver was acting within the scope of employment at the time of the accident, even if the driver violated company policies or traffic laws. Trucking companies, delivery services, rideshare companies, and other commercial vehicle operators must maintain higher insurance coverage limits than private drivers, often providing substantially more compensation for families. Employers can also be directly liable if they negligently hired a driver with a dangerous driving history, failed to provide adequate training, or pressured drivers to violate hours-of-service regulations that led to fatigued driving.
Government Entities
The City of Phoenix, Arizona Department of Transportation, or other government agencies can be liable when dangerous road conditions contribute to a fatal motorcycle accident. This includes poorly maintained roads with potholes or uneven surfaces, missing or obscured traffic signs, inadequate lighting at dangerous intersections, or dangerous road designs that create hazards for motorcyclists. Claims against government entities in Arizona are governed by the Arizona Governmental Liability Act and require filing a notice of claim with the appropriate government agency within 180 days of the accident under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-821.01, which is much shorter than the standard two-year wrongful death statute of limitations.
Types of Compensation Available in Phoenix Motorcycle Wrongful Death Claims
Arizona law allows families to recover several categories of damages in motorcycle accident wrongful death cases. These damages address both the financial impact of the death and the emotional losses the family suffers.
Economic damages compensate families for measurable financial losses directly caused by the death. Medical expenses incurred before death are recoverable, including emergency room treatment, ambulance transport, surgery, hospitalization, and any other medical care the deceased person received between the accident and death. Funeral and burial expenses are fully compensable, including the cost of the service, casket or cremation, burial plot, headstone, and related expenses. Lost income represents the wages, salary, benefits, and other earnings the deceased person would have earned over their expected working lifetime had they not been killed in the accident. This calculation considers the deceased person’s age, health, education, skills, work history, and career trajectory. Loss of benefits includes the value of health insurance, retirement contributions, pension benefits, and other employment benefits the deceased person would have provided to the family.
Non-economic damages address the intangible losses families suffer that cannot be measured with receipts or financial records. Loss of companionship compensates the surviving spouse and children for the emotional support, guidance, protection, comfort, and affection they lost when their loved one died. Loss of consortium addresses the specific loss of the marital relationship, including the physical and emotional intimacy the surviving spouse has permanently lost. Pain and suffering of survivors recognizes the grief, emotional trauma, and mental anguish family members experience after losing a loved one in a sudden, violent death. These damages have no cap in Arizona wrongful death cases, meaning the amount depends entirely on the specific circumstances of the family’s loss and the severity of their suffering.
In rare cases involving extreme recklessness or intentional misconduct, Arizona courts may award punitive damages under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-613. These damages are not intended to compensate the family but rather to punish the at-fault party and deter similar behavior in the future. Punitive damages are most commonly awarded when the at-fault driver was extremely intoxicated, engaged in street racing, or acted with conscious disregard for the safety of others on the road.
Arizona’s Statute of Limitations for Motorcycle Wrongful Death Claims
Arizona law imposes strict deadlines for filing wrongful death lawsuits. Under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-542, families generally have two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit in Arizona Superior Court. Missing this deadline typically results in permanent loss of the right to pursue compensation, regardless of how strong the case might be or how clear the other party’s fault was.
The two-year period begins on the date of death, not the date of the accident. In some cases, a motorcyclist may survive for days or weeks after an accident before dying from their injuries. When this happens, the statute of limitations for the wrongful death claim begins when the person dies, not when the initial accident occurred. This distinction matters because it affects how much time families have to investigate, gather evidence, and prepare their case.
Certain circumstances can pause or extend the statute of limitations through a legal principle called tolling. If the at-fault party leaves Arizona after the accident and remains out of state, the statute of limitations may be paused during their absence under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-502. If the deceased person’s estate has not been opened or a personal representative has not been appointed, the statute of limitations may be tolled until these legal steps are completed. However, families should never assume tolling will apply without consulting an attorney, as courts apply tolling rules narrowly and missing the deadline due to a misunderstanding of tolling provisions still results in case dismissal.
Claims against government entities have much shorter deadlines. Families must file a formal notice of claim with the appropriate government agency within 180 days of the death under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-821.01. Failure to file this notice within the 180-day window permanently bars any lawsuit against the government entity, even if the standard two-year wrongful death statute of limitations has not yet expired. These claims require immediate action to preserve legal rights.
The Process of Pursuing a Motorcycle Wrongful Death Claim in Phoenix
Understanding the steps involved in a wrongful death claim helps families know what to expect and how their attorney will build the case for maximum compensation.
Initial Consultation and Case Evaluation
The first step is meeting with a wrongful death attorney who will review the circumstances of the accident, examine any available evidence, and determine whether you have a valid claim. During this consultation, bring any documents you have including the police report, death certificate, medical records, photographs of the accident scene, and insurance correspondence. The attorney will explain your legal rights, identify all potentially liable parties, and discuss the likely value of your claim based on similar cases. Most wrongful death attorneys offer free consultations and work on a contingency fee basis, which means your family pays no upfront costs or attorney fees unless compensation is recovered.
Investigation and Evidence Gathering
Once you retain an attorney, they will conduct a comprehensive investigation to build the strongest possible case. This includes obtaining the full police report and any supplemental reports or investigator notes, collecting witness statements from anyone who saw the accident, securing video footage from traffic cameras or nearby businesses, photographing the accident scene and vehicle damage, obtaining the at-fault driver’s driving record and insurance information, and requesting the deceased person’s complete medical records from the time of the accident until death. Your attorney may also work with accident reconstruction experts who can analyze the physical evidence to determine exactly how the crash occurred, biomechanical engineers who can explain how the impact caused the fatal injuries, and economic experts who calculate the full value of lost income and benefits over the deceased person’s expected lifetime.
Demand and Negotiation
After gathering all evidence and documentation, your attorney will prepare a detailed demand letter to the at-fault party’s insurance company. This letter outlines the facts of the case, establishes legal liability, documents all damages the family suffered, and demands a specific settlement amount. The insurance company will typically respond with either a settlement offer or a denial. Most wrongful death claims are resolved through negotiation without going to trial, but this requires skilled advocacy because insurance companies routinely make lowball initial offers hoping families will accept inadequate settlements out of financial desperation or lack of legal knowledge. Your attorney will counter any unreasonable offers with additional evidence and continued negotiation aimed at securing a fair settlement that fully compensates your family.
Filing a Lawsuit
If settlement negotiations fail to produce a fair offer, your attorney will file a wrongful death lawsuit in Arizona Superior Court. The lawsuit formally names all defendants, states the legal basis for their liability, and specifies the damages your family is seeking. After the lawsuit is filed, both sides engage in discovery, which is a formal process of exchanging evidence, taking depositions of witnesses and parties, and building the case for trial. Discovery can take several months or longer depending on case complexity. Many cases settle during the discovery phase as both sides gain a clearer understanding of the evidence and the likely trial outcome.
Trial
If the case does not settle, it proceeds to trial where a jury hears evidence from both sides, listens to witness testimony and expert opinions, and ultimately decides whether the defendant is liable and how much compensation the family should receive. Your attorney will present a compelling case to the jury using all gathered evidence, expert testimony, and legal arguments. Trials can last several days or weeks depending on case complexity. After hearing all evidence, the jury deliberates and returns a verdict specifying the amount of damages awarded to the family.
How a Phoenix Motorcycle Wrongful Death Attorney Helps Families
Families facing wrongful death claims after a motorcycle accident benefit significantly from experienced legal representation that handles every aspect of the case while the family focuses on grieving and healing.
A wrongful death attorney investigates the accident thoroughly to identify all evidence of negligence and establish clear liability. This includes working with experts, interviewing witnesses, obtaining records that insurance companies do not voluntarily provide, and uncovering facts the insurance company may try to hide or minimize. Attorneys also identify all liable parties, not just the obvious at-fault driver, ensuring the family pursues compensation from everyone whose negligence contributed to the death including employers, vehicle owners, or government entities.
Attorneys accurately calculate the full value of the family’s losses by working with economists, actuaries, and medical experts who determine the lifetime value of lost income, benefits, and support the deceased person would have provided. They also assess non-economic damages like loss of companionship and emotional suffering, presenting evidence to insurance companies and juries that justifies substantial compensation for these intangible losses.
Experienced wrongful death lawyers handle all communication and negotiation with insurance companies, protecting families from tactics adjusters use to reduce payouts such as requesting recorded statements designed to elicit damaging admissions, pressuring families to accept quick settlements before understanding the full value of their claim, or arguing that the deceased person shared fault for the accident. Attorneys counter these tactics and negotiate aggressively for maximum compensation.
When cases cannot be settled fairly through negotiation, wrongful death attorneys are prepared to take cases to trial. They build compelling presentations for juries, work with expert witnesses who testify about liability and damages, cross-examine defense witnesses to expose weaknesses in the defense case, and argue persuasively for full compensation based on the evidence.
Common Challenges in Phoenix Motorcycle Wrongful Death Cases
Motorcycle wrongful death claims present unique challenges that require skilled legal handling to overcome insurance company defenses and secure fair compensation.
Insurance companies frequently argue that motorcyclists are inherently reckless or that the deceased rider contributed to the accident through speeding, lane splitting, or failing to wear protective gear. Arizona’s comparative negligence law allows families to recover damages even if the motorcyclist was partially at fault, but any percentage of fault assigned to the deceased reduces the total compensation proportionally. Defense attorneys and insurance adjusters aggressively pursue comparative fault arguments to minimize payouts, making it essential for your attorney to present clear evidence that the other party’s negligence was the primary cause of the death.
Insufficient insurance coverage is common in motorcycle accident deaths because Arizona’s minimum liability coverage requirements are low at just $25,000 per person under Arizona Revised Statutes § 28-4009. When a fatal motorcycle accident involves catastrophic damages that easily exceed hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, the at-fault driver’s minimum policy provides inadequate compensation. Attorneys address this by identifying all potentially liable parties who may have additional insurance coverage, pursuing claims against the at-fault driver’s personal assets, checking whether the deceased motorcyclist had uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage on their own policy that can provide additional compensation, and investigating whether other insurance policies like umbrella policies or commercial policies may cover the accident.
Disputes over the value of non-economic damages are common because there is no objective formula for calculating the value of loss of companionship, emotional suffering, or loss of consortium. Insurance companies routinely argue that the family’s requested amounts for these damages are excessive or unsupported. Attorneys overcome this by presenting testimony from family members about the depth of their relationship with the deceased, using expert testimony from psychologists or counselors about the impact of sudden traumatic loss, and citing jury verdicts from similar cases that support the compensation amount the family is seeking.
Why Phoenix Motorcycle Accident Wrongful Death Cases Require Immediate Action
Families who delay seeking legal representation after a motorcycle wrongful death face serious risks that can permanently reduce or eliminate their ability to recover compensation.
Critical evidence disappears quickly after accidents. Skid marks fade, debris gets cleared, video footage from traffic cameras and businesses gets recorded over, vehicles get repaired or sold, and witnesses move away or forget important details. Attorneys who begin investigating immediately can preserve this evidence before it vanishes, but waiting months to hire a lawyer often means the evidence is gone forever and the case becomes much harder to prove.
Insurance companies take advantage of unrepresented families by contacting them soon after the death with requests for recorded statements, offers of quick settlements, or requests to sign releases in exchange for small payments that eliminate the right to pursue additional compensation. Once a family accepts a settlement or signs a release, they typically cannot pursue additional compensation later even if they discover the settlement was grossly inadequate. Having an attorney involved from the beginning protects families from these tactics.
The statute of limitations and notice of claim deadlines create hard deadlines that cannot be extended if missed. While two years may seem like a long time, building a strong wrongful death case takes months of investigation, expert analysis, and preparation. Families who wait too long to hire an attorney may find that attorneys are unwilling to take the case because insufficient time remains to properly prepare it before the deadline.
Frequently Asked Questions About Phoenix Motorcycle Wrongful Death Lawyers
Can I file a wrongful death claim if my loved one was not wearing a helmet at the time of the fatal motorcycle accident?
Yes, you can still file a wrongful death claim even if your loved one was not wearing a helmet, because Arizona law does not require motorcyclists to wear helmets and failure to wear one does not automatically bar a wrongful death claim. However, the defense may argue that the death would not have occurred or would have been less severe if the motorcyclist had been wearing a helmet, which could result in a percentage of comparative fault being assigned to the deceased under Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-2505. If this happens, the total compensation awarded would be reduced by that percentage of fault, but you would still recover the remaining portion of damages. Your attorney will counter this defense by presenting expert testimony from accident reconstruction specialists and medical experts who can demonstrate that the helmet would not have prevented the fatal injuries given the severity of the impact and the nature of the trauma.
How long does it typically take to resolve a motorcycle wrongful death case in Phoenix?
The timeline for resolving a motorcycle wrongful death case in Phoenix varies significantly depending on whether the case settles through negotiation or proceeds to trial, the complexity of liability and damages issues, and how cooperative or adversarial the insurance company is during the claims process. Cases that settle without filing a lawsuit may resolve in six months to a year from the date the attorney begins working on the case, assuming liability is clear and the insurance company negotiates in good faith. Cases that require filing a lawsuit and proceeding through discovery typically take 18 months to three years or longer to reach resolution, especially if the case goes to trial. The timeline also depends on how quickly evidence can be gathered, whether expert witnesses need to be retained, and whether there are disputes over liability or comparative fault that require extensive investigation and litigation. Your attorney will work to resolve the case as efficiently as possible while ensuring the family receives full compensation rather than rushing to accept an inadequate early settlement offer.
What happens to the compensation recovered in a wrongful death lawsuit after the case is resolved?
The distribution of wrongful death compensation depends on who filed the claim and Arizona’s wrongful death statute found in Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-612, which specifies that damages are distributed to the deceased person’s spouse, children, and parents in proportions determined by their relationship to the deceased and the losses they suffered. If the surviving spouse filed the claim, they typically receive the largest portion of the settlement or verdict because they suffered both economic losses from the loss of the deceased person’s income and benefits and non-economic losses from the loss of the marital relationship. Children also receive portions of the compensation for their loss of parental guidance, support, and companionship, with amounts varying based on the children’s ages and dependency on the deceased parent. When there are multiple eligible family members, Arizona law does not specify exact percentages each receives, so distribution is either agreed upon by the family members or determined by the court based on evidence about each person’s relationship with and dependency on the deceased. Any attorney fees and case expenses are typically deducted from the total recovery before distribution to family members, and the contingency fee agreement signed at the beginning of the case will specify what percentage the attorney receives.
Can I file a wrongful death claim if the at-fault driver was never charged with a crime or was acquitted in criminal court?
Yes, you can absolutely file and win a wrongful death lawsuit even if the at-fault driver was never criminally charged or was found not guilty in criminal court, because civil wrongful death cases and criminal cases operate under completely different standards of proof and legal requirements. Criminal cases require proof beyond a reasonable doubt, which is a very high standard that requires the prosecution to eliminate virtually all doubt that the defendant committed the crime. Civil wrongful death cases require proof by a preponderance of the evidence, which is a much lower standard that simply means it is more likely than not that the defendant’s negligence caused the death. This means you can prove civil liability and win compensation even when the same evidence would not be sufficient to support a criminal conviction. Additionally, criminal cases focus on whether the defendant violated criminal laws like vehicular manslaughter or DUI statutes, while wrongful death cases focus on whether the defendant was negligent under civil law, which includes a much broader range of careless or reckless behavior that may not rise to the level of criminal conduct but still justifies compensating the family for their losses.
What if my family member’s motorcycle accident death occurred while they were working as a delivery driver or rideshare driver?
If your family member was working as a delivery driver, rideshare driver, or other type of employee at the time of the fatal motorcycle accident, your family may have both a workers’ compensation claim against the employer and a wrongful death claim against any third parties whose negligence caused the accident. Arizona workers’ compensation law under Arizona Revised Statutes § 23-1021 provides death benefits to surviving family members when an employee dies in a work-related accident, including coverage of funeral expenses and ongoing financial support payments to dependents. However, workers’ compensation benefits are typically limited and do not include compensation for non-economic damages like pain and suffering or loss of companionship. If the accident was caused by someone other than the employer such as a negligent driver who struck the motorcycle, your family can file a separate wrongful death lawsuit against that third party to recover full damages including non-economic losses. Your attorney will coordinate both the workers’ compensation claim and the wrongful death lawsuit to ensure your family receives maximum total compensation from all available sources while complying with Arizona’s rules on how workers’ compensation benefits are credited against wrongful death awards to prevent double recovery for the same losses.
How does Life Justice Law Group handle motorcycle wrongful death cases differently than other firms?
Life Justice Law Group provides compassionate, client-focused representation that recognizes the profound emotional trauma families experience after losing a loved one in a motorcycle accident. We take the time to understand your family’s unique loss and build a case that fully documents the impact on your lives rather than treating your loved one as just another case number. Our attorneys have extensive experience with complex motorcycle accident investigations and work with top experts in accident reconstruction, biomechanics, and economic loss analysis to build compelling evidence of liability and damages. We handle every aspect of the legal process so your family can focus on grieving and healing without the additional stress of dealing with insurance companies, paperwork, and legal procedures. Because we work on a contingency fee basis, your family pays no attorney fees unless we recover compensation through settlement or trial verdict. We fight aggressively against insurance companies that try to undervalue or deny valid claims, and we are fully prepared to take cases to trial when insurance companies refuse to offer fair settlements. Our goal is not just to secure compensation but to provide your family with a sense of justice and closure after a devastating loss.
Contact a Phoenix Motorcycle Accident Wrongful Death Lawyer Today
If you lost a family member in a Phoenix motorcycle accident, you deserve compassionate legal guidance and aggressive advocacy to hold negligent parties accountable and secure the compensation your family needs. Life Justice Law Group understands the devastating impact of wrongful death and provides experienced representation throughout every stage of your claim. We work on a contingency basis, which means your family pays no attorney fees unless we successfully recover compensation for your loss. We offer free consultations to discuss your case, answer your questions, and explain your legal options with no obligation or pressure. Call Life Justice Law Group today at (480) 378-8088 or complete our online contact form to schedule your free case evaluation and take the first step toward justice for your family.
