Multi-vehicle accidents on high-traffic corridors like Route 22 often present a “domino effect” of liability. When several cars are involved, insurance companies frequently attempt to shift the blame to others, arguing that their driver was merely reacting to an initial impact. For victims with serious injuries, this creates a chaotic legal landscape where securing full compensation requires untangling a web of finger-pointing, varying insurance limits, and complex state laws regarding shared fault.
The Accident Brief
- Incident Date: Tuesday, January 13, 2026.
- Location: Route 22 near the Whitehall Township interchanges, Lehigh County, PA.
- The Conflict: A multi-vehicle collision resulting in lane closures and a significant emergency response.
- Outcome: Several individuals sustained injuries and were treated at the scene or transported to local medical facilities; authorities are investigating the sequence of impacts.
Legal Analysis: Pennsylvania Statutes and Shared Fault
To secure a recovery in a Pennsylvania multi-car crash, your legal team must apply specific traffic codes to overcome “sudden emergency” defenses.
- Following Too Closely (75 Pa. C.S. § 3310): Most pileups stem from a violation of this statute, which requires drivers to maintain a “reasonable and prudent” distance. If forensic evidence proves a driver failed to maintain an assured clear distance ahead, they may be found negligent per se, regardless of the initial cause of traffic slowing.
- Modified Comparative Negligence (42 Pa. C.S. § 7102): Pennsylvania follows the “51% Bar Rule.” Victims can recover damages as long as they are not more than 50% at fault. However, their recovery is reduced by their own percentage of negligence. Insurance adjusters aggressively attempt to inflate a victim’s fault to push them over the 50% threshold and bar recovery entirely.
- Joint and Several Liability: In multi-car cases, we fight to identify every negligent party. If one driver is at least 60% at fault, they may be held liable for the entire judgment under Pennsylvania’s Fair Share Act, ensuring victims are not left shortchanged by underinsured drivers.
Immediate Action Steps: Preserving “Chain of Impact” Evidence
In pileups, evidence is often cleared quickly to restore traffic flow. You must act now to secure objective data:
- Spoliation Letters: We must immediately issue legal notices to all involved parties to preserve dash-cam footage and Electronic Control Module (ECM) data. This “black box” data proves exactly when each driver braked and at what speed.
- Witness Statements: In a chaotic scene, police often miss secondary witnesses. We identify and interview bystanders to establish the audible sequence of crashes, which helps prove who struck whom first.
- Photo Documentation of Crush Damage: The angle and depth of vehicle damage provide scientific proof of the force and direction of the various impacts in the chain.
Contact Our PA Multi-Vehicle Accident Lawyer
If your family is dealing with the fallout of a multi-vehicle crash on Route 22, do not let the insurance companies decide who was at fault. You deserve an independent investigation that puts your recovery first. Contact Stanley Law Offices at 888-997-3889 for a private, comprehensive evaluation of your legal rights. Our Pennsylvania car accident lawyers understand the complexity of Pennsylvania’s highway laws and are ready to fight for the justice you deserve.






