Your Battle, Our Compass:
Los Angeles Bus Accident Lawyer
Injured in a bus accident in Los Angeles? With 3.9 million residents and 55,000+ annual collisions, our attorneys handle every type of bus accident case. Call (213) 516-9809. See all our California office locations.




TL;DR — Los Angeles Bus Accident Lawyer
Compass Law Group represents bus accident victims across Los Angeles. Our firm has recovered $250,000,000+ for injury victims. No win, no fee. Free 24/7 consultation in English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean at (213) 516-9809. See all Los Angeles practice areas. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Practice Areas We Handle in Los Angeles
View All 14 Practice Areas+
Los Angeles Bus Accident Lawyers: Fighting for Maximum Compensation
LA Metro operates more than 2,000 buses across 170–plus routes, carrying roughly 900,000 riders on an average weekday—making the Los Angeles bus network the second-largest in the United States. Add LADOT DASH shuttles, school buses serving LAUSD’s 1,000–plus campuses, tour buses running Hollywood–to–Santa Monica loops, Greyhound coaches on Interstate 5, and private charter operators, and millions of people ride buses on L.A. streets every week. Under California’s common carrier doctrine, bus operators owe passengers the highest degree of care—a standard far more demanding than ordinary negligence—because passengers entrust their safety entirely to the driver and the transit agency.
If you or a family member was injured in a bus collision—whether as a passenger, a pedestrian struck at a bus stop, or a motorist hit by a bus—Compass Law Group’s bus accident attorneys are ready to pursue every dollar of compensation you are owed. From our Los Angeles office at 633 W 5th Street, 26th Floor, managing partners Joseph Shirazi and Simon Esfandi have recovered more than $250 million for injury victims, including a $14.5M truck accident verdict and a $13M trial verdict. We know how to hold government transit agencies, private bus companies, and their insurers accountable.
You pay nothing unless we win. Call (213) 516-9809 for a free, confidential consultation—24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Hablamos español. We also consult in Farsi and Korean.
Why Choose Compass Law Group for Your Los Angeles Bus Accident Case?
- $250 million–plus recovered for injury victims. Our firm handles high-stakes injury cases against government agencies, commercial carriers, and large insurance companies—the exact opponents you face in a bus accident claim.
- Government claims experience. Bus accident cases against Metro, LADOT DASH, and school districts require strict compliance with Government Code §911.2’s six-month claim deadline. We have filed dozens of government tort claims and know every procedural trap that can kill a case before it starts.
- Multilingual legal team serving all of L.A. Our attorneys and staff speak English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean—essential in a city where the majority of Metro riders speak a language other than English at home.
- No Win, No Fee—zero financial risk to you. You will never pay a retainer or hourly rate. We advance all case costs and only collect a fee when we secure compensation on your behalf.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique.
Who Is Liable in a Los Angeles Bus Accident?
Bus accident liability in Los Angeles is more complex than a typical car crash because multiple parties—government agencies, private companies, drivers, and maintenance contractors—may share fault. Identifying every liable party is critical to maximizing your recovery.
Government Entity Claims—The 6-Month Deadline
When an LA Metro bus, LADOT DASH shuttle, or municipal transit vehicle causes your injuries, you are suing a government entity. California Government Code §911.2 requires you to file an administrative tort claim within six months of the accident—not the standard two-year statute of limitations. Miss this deadline, and your claim is almost certainly dead. Our attorneys file government claims within days of being retained, preserving your right to full compensation.
Metro / MTA. The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority operates buses across every corner of L.A. County. Metro is a public entity subject to Government Code §835 (dangerous condition of public property) and California Vehicle Code §17001, which imposes liability on public entities for the negligent operation of motor vehicles by their employees. When a Metro bus rear-ends traffic on Wilshire Boulevard or strikes a pedestrian at a Vermont Avenue stop, Metro’s own internal safety records, driver logs, and on-board camera footage become key evidence.
School districts. LAUSD operates one of the largest school bus fleets in California. When a school bus is involved in a collision—whether transporting students on Figueroa Street or loading at a campus on Sunset Boulevard—the school district is the liable government entity, and the same six-month claim deadline applies under Gov. Code §911.2.
Private Bus Companies
Not every bus on L.A.’s streets is government-operated. Greyhound runs long-haul routes through the Downtown LA Greyhound Station at 1716 E 7th Street, and regional carriers like FlixBus, Megabus, and dozens of charter and tour bus operators serve Los Angeles daily. Private bus companies carry standard commercial insurance policies, and claims against them follow the normal two-year statute of limitations under CCP §335.1—but the common carrier doctrine still applies, holding them to the highest standard of care.
Our attorneys also handle cases where pedestrians are struck near bus stops and collisions between buses and passenger vehicles on L.A.’s congested streets.
Common Causes of Bus Accidents in Los Angeles
L.A.’s dense traffic, aging infrastructure, and heavy bus schedules create a constant collision risk. The most common bus accident causes we see in our caseload include:
- Metro bus rear-end collisions. Metro’s Orange Line and Rapid buses on Wilshire, Vermont, and Western corridors operate on tight schedules, and drivers frequently follow too closely in stop-and-go traffic—leading to rear-end impacts at signalized intersections.
- DASH shuttle accidents at stops. LADOT DASH buses serve Downtown, Hollywood, Los Feliz, Boyle Heights, and Watts on narrow neighborhood streets. Sudden stops to pick up passengers, combined with limited sight lines, cause collisions with trailing vehicles and injuries to standing passengers inside the bus.
- School bus collisions. LAUSD buses navigate school zones across South LA, East LA, and the San Fernando Valley during peak morning and afternoon hours. Distracted drivers passing stopped school buses and school bus drivers making wide turns at congested intersections are leading causes of injury.
- Tour bus crashes in Hollywood. Open-top and enclosed tour buses travel Hollywood Boulevard, Mulholland Drive, and the Sunset Strip, often driven by operators unfamiliar with L.A.’s steep grades, tight turns, and aggressive traffic patterns.
- Greyhound and intercity bus accidents on I-5. Long-distance coaches traveling the I-5 corridor between Downtown LA and the Central Valley face high-speed merging, truck traffic, and driver fatigue on overnight runs—conditions that produce catastrophic wrecks.
- Bus versus pedestrian collisions. Pedestrians waiting at or crossing near bus stops on Vermont Avenue, Broadway, and Central Avenue are struck when buses make wide right turns, pull into stops too quickly, or depart before passengers have cleared the curb.
- Bus driver fatigue. Metro and private bus drivers work split shifts and long hours. Fatigued drivers have slower reaction times and impaired judgment, particularly on late-night and early-morning routes through Downtown and South L.A.
- Defective brakes and mechanical failure. Deferred maintenance on aging bus fleets can cause brake failures, tire blowouts, and steering malfunctions. Metro has faced repeated audit findings regarding maintenance backlogs at its bus divisions.
- Dangerous bus stop locations. Some L.A. bus stops are positioned dangerously close to active traffic lanes, have no sidewalk buffers, or lack adequate lighting—particularly along Central Avenue, Slauson Avenue, and Florence Avenue in South Los Angeles.
- Rideshare and private vehicles encroaching on bus lanes. Uber, Lyft, and private vehicles illegally stopping or driving in dedicated bus lanes on Wilshire Boulevard and Flower Street create sudden hazards that force bus drivers into emergency maneuvers, injuring passengers inside.
Frequently Asked Questions — Los Angeles Bus Accident Attorney
Who can be held liable for a bus accident in Los Angeles?
Liability in a Los Angeles bus accident depends on who operated the vehicle. If a Metro, DASH, or Big Blue Bus was involved, the government agency that runs it may be liable; if a private charter or tour bus caused the crash, the company and its insurer are the targets. We investigate the driver’s history, maintenance records, and dispatch logs to identify every responsible party — including third-party contractors and negligent motorists who contributed to the collision.
How long do I have to file a bus accident lawsuit in California?
Under California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1, you generally have two years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit against a private bus operator. However, if the bus was operated by a government agency — such as LA Metro or a municipal transit authority — you must file a government tort claim within just six months of the incident before any lawsuit can proceed. Missing either deadline almost certainly bars your claim entirely, which is why contacting us immediately after the accident is critical.
Does it cost anything to hire you to handle my bus accident case?
No — we work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing upfront and owe us no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. Our fee is a percentage of the settlement or verdict we obtain on your behalf. There are no hidden costs, and your initial consultation is completely free.
What if I was partially at fault for the bus accident?
California follows a pure comparative fault rule, so you can still recover compensation even if you share some responsibility for the crash. Your total damages award is simply reduced by your percentage of fault — for example, if you are found 20% at fault and your damages are $100,000, you recover $80,000. We build the strongest possible case to minimize any fault attributed to you and maximize your recovery.
What types of compensation can I recover after a bus accident?
Victims of bus accidents in Los Angeles may recover economic damages such as medical expenses, future treatment costs, lost wages, and loss of earning capacity, as well as non-economic damages including pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life. In cases involving egregious conduct — such as a bus company that ignored known brake defects — punitive damages may also be available. We document every category of loss from the day of the crash through your full recovery.
How do I pay my medical bills while my case is pending?
You should not delay necessary treatment because of cost concerns. We routinely work with Los Angeles-area medical providers who treat bus accident victims on a medical lien basis, meaning they defer payment until your case resolves. Your own health insurance, MedPay coverage, or Medi-Cal may also cover treatment in the interim. We help coordinate these arrangements so your care continues without financial interruption.
What should I do immediately after a bus accident in Los Angeles?
Call 911 and get emergency medical attention even if you feel only minor pain — symptoms from spinal and soft-tissue injuries often emerge hours or days later. Photograph the scene, the bus number, the driver’s information, and any visible injuries, and collect contact information from witnesses before they disperse. Do not give recorded statements to the bus company’s insurer without speaking to us first, as those statements are routinely used to minimize claims.
How does filing a claim against LA Metro or another government bus agency differ from a private claim?
When a government-operated bus such as an LA Metro bus or Culver CityBus is involved, the California Government Claims Act requires you to file an administrative tort claim with the agency within six months of the accident — a strict prerequisite to any lawsuit. The agency then has 45 days to accept or reject the claim, after which we can file suit if needed. This compressed timeline makes it essential to contact an attorney as soon as possible after any municipal bus collision.
How long will my bus accident case take to resolve?
Most bus accident cases in Los Angeles settle within six to eighteen months, though complex cases involving severe injuries, disputed liability, or government defendants can take longer. Cases that reach the Los Angeles Superior Court — located at 111 N. Hill Street in Downtown LA — may take two to three years if they proceed to trial. We pursue every efficient resolution while never sacrificing the full value of your claim.
Will my case go to trial, or will it settle?
The vast majority of bus accident cases we handle resolve through negotiated settlements before trial, often after we file suit and complete the discovery process. However, we prepare every case as though it will be tried in front of a jury so that insurance companies and bus operators know we are not willing to accept an unfair offer. If a reasonable settlement cannot be reached, we are fully prepared to take your case to verdict at the Los Angeles Superior Court.
Can multiple parties share liability in a Los Angeles bus accident?
Yes — bus accident cases frequently involve shared liability among the bus driver, the transit company or agency, a bus manufacturer (for defective parts), a maintenance contractor, or even another negligent driver whose actions triggered the crash. Under California’s comparative fault system, each party’s percentage of responsibility is determined, and they pay their proportionate share of your damages. We conduct a thorough investigation — including obtaining the bus’s event data recorder and maintenance logs — to identify and pursue all liable parties.
What if I was a passenger on the bus when the accident happened?
Bus passengers are owed a heightened duty of care under California law because common carriers like Metro and private bus companies are held to the highest standard of care for the safety of their riders. As a passenger, you are almost never at fault for the accident, which significantly strengthens your claim. We pursue full compensation for every injury you sustained as a passenger, whether the crash was caused by the bus driver, another vehicle, or a road hazard.
How is the value of my bus accident case determined?
The value of your claim depends on the severity and permanence of your injuries, the total cost of your past and future medical care, your lost income and reduced earning potential, and the degree of pain and suffering you have endured. We retain medical experts and, when necessary, life-care planners and economists to calculate the full present and future value of your losses. Catastrophic injuries such as traumatic brain injuries or spinal cord damage — which are common in high-impact bus collisions on freeways like the 405 or 110 — can warrant multi-million-dollar recoveries.
What evidence is most important in a Los Angeles bus accident case?
Critical evidence includes the bus’s onboard camera footage, the event data recorder (EDR) or black box, the driver’s hours-of-service logs, pre-trip inspection records, and the agency’s or company’s accident reports. Eyewitness statements and LAPD or CHP collision reports are also essential. Because bus companies are required to preserve this data only for a limited time, we send spoliation letters immediately upon being retained to prevent its destruction.
What makes bus accident cases different from regular car accident claims?
Bus accidents typically involve more severe injuries due to the size and weight of the vehicle, multiple injured parties with competing claims, and a defendant that is often a government entity or large corporation with experienced legal teams. The government claim deadline, the presence of an event data recorder, and federal and state safety regulations that govern commercial buses add layers of complexity not found in ordinary car accident claims. Our firm has handled bus accident cases against LA Metro, private charter operators, and school districts throughout Los Angeles County, and we know how to navigate every step of this process effectively.
What Is Your Los Angeles Bus Accident Case Worth?
Bus accident cases tend to involve serious injuries because of the forces involved—a standard Metro bus weighs approximately 40,000 pounds and carries no seatbelts for passengers. Standing riders, elderly passengers, and children are especially vulnerable to sudden stops, collisions, and rollovers. The value of your case depends on injury severity, total medical costs, lost income, the number of liable parties, and whether a government entity is involved.
Emergency treatment at LAC+USC Medical Center, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, or UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center can generate bills exceeding $100,000 for a single bus accident trauma admission. Add orthopedic surgery, neurological rehabilitation at Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, and years of physical therapy, and total medical costs can reach seven figures. Our attorneys work with forensic economists, life-care planners, and treating physicians to document every current and future expense.
Compensation Available in Los Angeles Bus Accident Cases
California law allows bus accident victims to recover both economic and non-economic damages, including:
- Emergency room, hospital, and surgical costs—including ambulance transport, trauma care, ICU stays, and rehabilitation
- Future medical expenses—ongoing physical therapy, assistive devices, home modifications, and long-term care
- Lost wages and earning capacity—past and future income lost because of your injuries, including diminished earning potential
- Pain and suffering—physical pain, emotional distress, anxiety, depression, and PTSD
- Loss of enjoyment of life—inability to participate in daily activities, hobbies, and routines you enjoyed before the accident
- Permanent disability or disfigurement—scarring, amputation, or chronic conditions resulting from the crash
- Wrongful death damages—if a loved one was killed, surviving family members can recover funeral costs, loss of financial support, and loss of companionship
California does not cap non-economic damages in personal injury cases. If the bus driver or another defendant acted with malice or conscious disregard for safety—such as driving under the influence—punitive damages may also apply.
Types of Bus Accident Injuries
Because most bus passengers are unrestrained—standing, seated without seatbelts, or waiting at stops—bus accident injuries tend to be severe. Common injuries our Los Angeles bus accident attorneys handle include:
- Whiplash and cervical spine injuries from sudden stops. When a Metro or DASH bus brakes hard, unbelted passengers are thrown forward into seats, poles, or other riders, causing neck and upper-back injuries that can require months of treatment.
- Falls inside the bus. Standing passengers and elderly riders are hurled to the floor during abrupt stops, sharp turns, or collisions. Hip fractures, wrist fractures, and traumatic brain injuries from falling inside a bus are disturbingly common.
- Pedestrians struck by buses. Being hit by a 40,000-pound bus causes catastrophic injuries—crush injuries, multiple fractures, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, and fatal blunt-force trauma.
- Traumatic brain injuries (TBI). Head impacts against windows, metal handrails, seat backs, and pavement cause concussions, skull fractures, and diffuse axonal injuries.
- Spinal cord injuries and paralysis. Compression fractures, herniated discs, and complete or incomplete spinal cord damage leave victims facing lifelong disability.
- Broken bones. Pelvis, femur, tibia, rib, and hip fractures requiring surgical fixation and extended recovery.
- Psychological trauma. PTSD, anxiety disorders, and phobias related to riding public transit or being near buses.
Government Immunity Challenges in Bus Accident Claims
Suing a government transit agency is not the same as suing a private driver. California’s Government Claims Act (Gov. Code §810 et seq.) creates a web of procedural requirements and limited immunities that can derail your case if not handled precisely:
- Six-month administrative claim deadline. Under Gov. Code §911.2, you must file a written tort claim with the government entity (Metro, LADOT, or LAUSD) within six months of the accident. This is not a lawsuit—it is a mandatory prerequisite. Fail to file on time, and you may be permanently barred from suing.
- Government denial and the right to sue. The agency has 45 days to respond. If your claim is denied or ignored, you then have six months from the denial date to file a lawsuit in court.
- Design immunity. Government entities sometimes argue “design immunity” under Gov. Code §830.6—claiming that a bus stop, roadway, or transit facility was built according to an approved plan. Our attorneys counter this defense by showing the agency had notice of changed conditions that made the original design dangerous.
- CVC §17001—public entity vehicle liability. This statute makes government agencies liable for injuries caused by the negligent operation of their vehicles, including buses. It is the primary statutory basis for most Metro and DASH bus accident claims.
Compass Law Group has extensive experience navigating government tort claims. We know the forms, the deadlines, the agencies, and the bureaucratic tactics that government lawyers use to deny or delay compensation.
The Common Carrier Doctrine and Bus Accident Claims
California Civil Code §2100 classifies bus operators—both public and private—as common carriers, which imposes the highest degree of care and diligence toward passengers. This is a significantly higher standard than ordinary negligence. A common carrier must:
- Use the utmost care and diligence in safely transporting passengers
- Provide safe vehicles that are properly maintained and inspected
- Employ competent, properly trained, and adequately rested drivers
- Warn passengers of known dangers
Under the common carrier doctrine, even a momentary lapse in attention by a bus driver—a failure to check mirrors before pulling from a stop, a turn taken too sharply, or a failure to wait for passengers to be seated—can constitute a breach of the heightened duty. This doctrine gives bus accident victims a significant legal advantage that our attorneys use aggressively in settlement negotiations and at trial.
What to Do After a Bus Accident in Los Angeles
The steps you take immediately after a bus accident can determine whether your claim succeeds or fails—especially when a government entity is involved. Here is what our attorneys recommend:
- Call 911 and stay at the scene. Request paramedics even if your injuries seem minor. Adrenaline masks pain, and internal injuries from bus collisions are common. An LAPD or CHP officer will respond, document the scene, and generate a traffic collision report.
- Document everything. If you are physically able, photograph the bus number, route number, the driver’s name and badge (posted near the driver’s seat on Metro buses), the interior of the bus, your injuries, the intersection, and any debris. Get contact information from other passengers and witnesses.
- Seek medical treatment within 24 hours. Go to the nearest emergency room—LAC+USC Medical Center, Cedars-Sinai, UCLA Medical Center, or Good Samaritan Hospital. Follow-up care creates the medical paper trail linking your injuries to the bus accident.
- Report the accident to the transit agency. File a report with Metro, LADOT, or the private bus company. Request a copy of any incident report the driver filed.
- FILE YOUR GOVERNMENT CLAIM WITHIN 6 MONTHS. If a government-operated bus caused your injuries, California Government Code §911.2 requires a written administrative tort claim within six months—not two years. This is the single most important deadline in your case. Call Compass Law Group at (213) 516-9809 immediately so we can file this claim and begin building your case.
Statute of Limitations for Los Angeles Bus Accident Claims
Government buses (Metro, DASH, school buses): You must file an administrative tort claim within six months of the accident under California Government Code §911.2. If the claim is denied, you have six months from the denial to file a lawsuit in court. This compressed timeline is the most common reason bus accident victims lose their right to compensation.
Private buses (Greyhound, tour buses, charter buses): The standard California statute of limitations applies—two years from the date of the accident under CCP §335.1 for personal injury, and two years for wrongful death.
If a dangerous road condition or defective bus stop contributed to your accident, a government claim under Gov. Code §835 must also be filed within six months. Do not attempt to navigate these overlapping deadlines alone. Contact our office immediately.
Evidence in Bus Accident Cases
Building a winning bus accident case in Los Angeles requires aggressive, time-sensitive evidence collection. Our legal team secures and analyzes:
- On-board bus camera footage. Every Metro bus is equipped with multiple interior and exterior cameras. This footage is critical evidence—but Metro’s retention policy means it can be overwritten within days. We issue preservation letters immediately.
- Bus operator logs and maintenance records. Driver shift schedules, hours-of-service logs, pre-trip inspection reports, and maintenance histories can reveal fatigue, mechanical defects, or deferred repairs.
- LAPD and CHP collision reports. The officer’s diagram, witness statements, and preliminary fault determination form the foundation of liability analysis.
- LADOT traffic camera footage. LADOT operates over 4,700 traffic cameras across L.A. Intersections on Metro’s busiest routes—Wilshire & Western, Vermont & Santa Monica, Broadway & 7th—are typically covered.
- Transit agency internal investigations. Metro and LADOT conduct internal incident reviews after bus accidents. Our attorneys subpoena these records during litigation.
- Accident reconstruction analysis. Retained experts use physical evidence, vehicle damage, and biomechanics to reconstruct the collision and establish fault.
- Medical records and expert testimony. Treating physicians, surgeons, neurologists, and life-care planners document the full scope of your injuries and long-term needs.
Los Angeles Bus Accident Statistics
The scope of bus-related injuries in Los Angeles reflects the massive scale of the transit network:
- Metro buses are involved in approximately 1,100 collisions per year across Los Angeles County, according to Metro’s own safety reports.
- The National Transit Database reports that LA Metro consistently ranks among the top U.S. transit agencies for total reportable bus safety events, including collisions, passenger falls, and pedestrian strikes.
- School bus accidents in California injure hundreds of students and bystanders annually. LAUSD—the second-largest school district in the nation—operates buses on some of L.A.’s most congested corridors.
- Tour bus crashes in the Los Angeles area have resulted in multiple mass-casualty events over the past decade, particularly on mountain roads and freeway interchanges.
- Pedestrians struck by buses face a fatality rate more than 4 times higher than those struck by passenger vehicles, due to the bus’s mass and the height of impact.
- The FMCSA reports that intercity bus accidents on I-5 and I-10 corridors through Los Angeles account for a disproportionate share of California’s commercial bus crash fatalities.
Contact a Los Angeles Bus Accident Lawyer Today
Bus accident cases have unique deadlines that can permanently bar your claim if missed. If a government bus injured you, the six-month clock under Gov. Code §911.2 is already ticking. Every day you wait, on-board camera footage risks being overwritten, witnesses forget details, and government agencies gain procedural advantages.
Compass Law Group’s Los Angeles office at 633 W 5th Street, 26th Floor, is steps from Metro’s Downtown bus hub. Managing partners Joseph Shirazi (Cal. Bar #265403) and Simon Esfandi (Cal. Bar #275307) personally oversee bus accident cases and have the resources to take on Metro, LAUSD, Greyhound, and any private carrier.
We speak English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean. We are available 24/7. And you pay nothing unless we win your case.
Call (213) 516-9809 now for your free consultation. The sooner you act, the stronger your case.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is unique.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is liable in a bus accident—the driver or the transit agency?+
How do I file a claim against a government-run bus like Metro or DASH?+
What is the average bus accident settlement in California?+
How long do I have to file a bus accident claim in Los Angeles?+
Can bus passengers sue for injuries?+
What types of injuries are common in bus accidents?+
What is the common carrier doctrine and how does it help my bus accident case?+
Can I sue the City of Los Angeles for a dangerous bus stop?+
What if I was injured as a pedestrian at a bus stop?+
Do I need a lawyer for a bus accident claim against Metro?+
Talk to a Los Angeles Bus Accident Lawyer Today
Call Compass Law Group at (213) 516-9809. Free consultation, no fees unless we win. 24/7. Visit our LA office.
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California's
Gold Standard
Injury Law Firm
With Joseph Shirazi and Simon Esfandi at the helm, our firm is a trusted name in accident law in California.
Meet Our Managing Partners
National Top 100 Trial Lawyers and Avvo 10.0 Superb. Loyola Law School graduate. Recognized for his $14,500,000 truck accident verdict and a $13,000,000 trial verdict.
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Super Lawyers Rising Star. Southwestern Law School graduate. Led the firm’s $9,870,000 motorcycle accident settlement and a $2,250,000 rideshare recovery.
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Jerry
After 10 accidents and 9 attorneys, the client met Simon, who stood out for his honesty and clear communication. Years later, after another accident, the client called Simon and was impressed by his professionalism and follow-through. Simon explained everything, connected him with top doctors, and kept every promise. It was the first time the client felt truly supported—highly recommending Simon and Joseph for their integrity and dedication.
Jacob
Jacob was rear-ended by a big rig and left nearly paralyzed for a year. He found Cooper Law Group, and Joseph and Simon personally helped him through the legal process. Over two years, they ensured he got the medical care and surgeries he needed, helped repair his car, and secured the compensation he deserved. He highly recommends them for truly fighting for their clients.
Blandine
During the early days of COVID, Blandine was hit by a car while biking to work. Alone and unsure of what to do, they found Compass Law Group. Joseph was the first to respond with care and clarity. Throughout the case, the team—Joseph, Simon, and Julie—provided support, regular check-ins, and made the client feel safe and cared for. They now consider the firm like family and highly recommend them for their compassion and competence.
Understanding Your Rights:
Frequently Asked
Questions
#1 Do I have a case?
Understanding whether a claim exists is one of the challenges of personal injury law. This is why we offer free initial consultations to help you make this determination and allow you an avenue to vindicate your rights.
We’re committed to fighting for the rights of accident victims throughout Southern California, and, unlike other California personal injury attorneys, we will take on any case if we can help, no matter how big or small.
#2 What is personal injury?
Personal injury involves harm to an individual’s body or property caused by someone else’s negligence. It can range from minor to significant injuries, often requiring legal action to recover damages. We specialize in representing and securing fair settlements for such victims.
#3 Why hire Compass Law Group?
Our client-focused approach ensures personalized attention, detailed case building, and compelling evidence presentation. We’re skilled in negotiating settlements and prepared for trial with aggressive strategies. Our firm maintains transparent communication, involves clients in the process, and utilizes a wide network of expert witnesses and resources to strengthen cases. Choosing us means trusting a team dedicated to your success and justice.
#4What if I didn't go to the hospital?
No matter the injury size, you have rights that need defending. Many injuries seem minor at first but can worsen over time. Ignoring treatment or legal advice risks your health and compensation. Seek immediate medical and legal help after any accident to ensure proper diagnosis and strengthen your compensation claim.