The truck hit you. The damage is real. The pain is real. And somewhere across town, inside a corporate office or an insurance war room, a team of people is already working against you.
Trucking companies and their insurers do not panic after a serious crash. They execute. They have playbooks, rapid response teams, and defense attorneys on speed dial, all trained to do one thing: minimize what they pay you, or pay you nothing at all.
What "Delay and Deny" Actually Means in Trucking Cases
How Trucking Insurers Weaponize Time
"Delay and deny" is exactly what it sounds like. Insurance companies and their defense teams deliberately stretch out the claims and litigation process, not because the facts are complicated, but because time works in their favor.
The longer a case drags on, the more pressure builds on the injured person. Medical bills pile up. Lost income compounds. Emotional exhaustion sets in. And at some calculated point, the insurer swoops in with a lowball offer, betting that you're too worn down to say no.
Why Delay Is a Financial Strategy, Not an Accident
This is not incompetence. It is not bureaucratic slowness. It is a deliberate financial calculation.
Trucking carriers and their insurers know that:
- Injured people have immediate financial needs that defense attorneys do not
- The longer litigation lasts, the more it costs a plaintiff to maintain a case
- Witnesses' memories fade, evidence gets harder to access, and resolve weakens over time
- Most people, without strong legal representation, eventually accept less than they deserve
The First Move: Rapid Response Teams You Never See Coming
What Trucking Companies Deploy Within Hours
Within hours of a serious trucking accident, sometimes before you've been discharged from the emergency room, the trucking company's response team is already on the ground. These teams typically include:
- Accident reconstruction specialists
- Defense investigators
- Insurance adjusters
- In some cases, attorneys working under a joint defense agreement
Why This Matters for Your Case
By the time most accident victims even think about calling a lawyer, the other side has already interviewed witnesses, photographed the scene, and begun assembling a defense. If the truck had a dashcam or electronic logging device, that footage and data may already be in the hands of people who don't want you to see it.
Drowning You in Discovery Fights
Discovery is the pretrial phase of litigation where both sides exchange information, including documents, records, data, and testimony. In a trucking case, this is where the critical evidence lives:
- Electronic logging device (ELD) data showing hours of service violations
- Black box / ECM data capturing speed, braking, and throttle before impact
- Driver qualification files, background checks, and training records
- Maintenance logs and inspection histories
- Communications between the driver, dispatch, and the carrier
How Stonewalling Becomes a Litigation Tactic
Discovery fights in trucking cases are rarely about legitimate legal disputes. They are about friction. Defense attorneys routinely:
- Object to requests as "overly broad" or "unduly burdensome" to delay production
- Produce incomplete records, forcing follow-up motions
- Claim certain documents are protected under attorney-client privilege, sometimes improperly
- Drag out deposition scheduling for months at a time
The Medical Records Trap
Overly Broad Requests Are Not Accidental
One of the most common delay and deny insurance tactics is the sweeping medical records request. Defense attorneys will demand years, sometimes decades, of your prior medical history, far beyond anything reasonably related to your injuries from the crash.
On the surface, it looks like due diligence. In practice, it serves two purposes:
Delay
Gathering, reviewing, and litigating the scope of these requests takes months.
Narrative Control
Insurers are looking for anything in your medical history they can use to argue your injuries are pre-existing, unrelated, or exaggerated.
How Your Own Records Get Used Against You
A prior back complaint from five years ago. A past mental health visit. A workers' comp claim from a different job. Defense teams pull these threads hoping to reframe you, not as someone seriously injured by their client's driver, but as someone who was already broken before the crash.
Motion Hearings: Death by a Thousand Filings
A motion hearing is a court proceeding where one side asks the judge to make a ruling on a specific legal issue before trial. Motions are a normal, necessary part of litigation. Defense attorneys in trucking cases, however, have turned motion practice into an art form of delay.
How Motions Become a Stalling Tool
Common motions filed not to win, but to slow things down include:
- Motions to dismiss: Challenging the legal sufficiency of your claims, often on technical grounds
- Motions for summary judgment: Arguing the case should never reach a jury, sometimes filed multiple times
- Motions to strike experts: Attacking your medical or accident reconstruction experts to delay trial readiness
- Motions for protective orders: Blocking or limiting discovery you're entitled to
Adjournments: Buying Time at Your Expense
An adjournment is a postponement of a trial date, deposition, or hearing that gets pushed back. In isolation, adjournments are routine. Schedules conflict. Emergencies happen. Courts grant them as a matter of professional courtesy.
In a delay and deny strategy, adjournments are requested early, often, and for reasons that are technically valid but substantively pretextual:
- Counsel has a scheduling conflict with another trial
- A key witness is unavailable
- Additional time is needed to review newly produced documents
- The defense team needs more time to retain an expert
The Lowball Offer at the Breaking Point
Why the Offer Finally Comes
After months or years of delay, a settlement offer eventually arrives. The timing is rarely coincidental. Insurers track the arc of a plaintiff's situation, including financial stress, health complications, and life disruption, and they calibrate their offer accordingly.
What They're Counting On
The lowball offer is the final stage of the delay and deny strategy. By the time it lands, many plaintiffs have already:
- Depleted savings or taken on debt to cover medical expenses
- Watched family relationships strain under prolonged stress
- Grown frustrated with a legal process that feels endless
- Lost confidence that a trial will ever actually happen
Marko Law: Built for This Fight
Trial-Ready Representation Changes the Dynamic
Trucking defense teams are not afraid of every plaintiff's attorney. They know which firms will settle cheap and which ones will take a case to verdict. That distinction determines everything about how they respond to your claim.
When a firm is genuinely prepared to try a case, delay tactics become far less effective. There is no breaking point to find if the attorney on the other side has more patience, more preparation, and more courtroom credibility than your defense team.
How Marko Law Responds to These Tactics
Marko Law anticipates delay and deny from day one. That means:
- Immediate evidence preservation: Sending spoliation letters and litigation holds before evidence disappears
- Aggressive discovery practice: Pursuing black box data, ELD records, and driver files with motions to compel when necessary
- Strategic motion response: Answering every defense filing with precision and without losing momentum
- Trial preparation that never stops: Building the case for a jury from the first client meeting, not the week before trial
Time Is Their Weapon. Don't Let Them Use It Against You.
The delay and deny strategy is real, it is widespread in trucking insurance defense, and it works, but only when the injured person doesn't know it's happening or doesn't have representation that can match it.
You were injured through no fault of your own. The recovery process is already hard enough without a well-funded defense machine working against you behind the scenes. The earlier you have an experienced trucking accident attorney in your corner, the harder it becomes for these tactics to take hold.
Your Next Step Starts With One Call
If you or someone you love has been seriously injured in a trucking accident in Michigan, the clock is already running on the statute of limitations, on evidence preservation, and on the trucking company's strategy to minimize your claim.
Marko Law offers a free case evaluation with no obligation. We handle trucking accident cases on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless we win.
📞 +1-313-777-7777
📍 220 W. Congress, 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48226
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At Marko Law, we fight hard. We don't back down.