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Everett Wrongful Death Lawyer for Grieving Families

An Everett wrongful death lawyer helps families seek accountability and compensation when a loved one dies because of someone else’s careless, reckless, or wrongful conduct. Strong Law Accident & Injury Attorneys represents families in Everett and throughout Snohomish County after fatal crashes, unsafe property incidents, work-related third-party claims, and other preventable tragedies.

No legal claim can replace the person you lost. A wrongful death claim can, however, help your family pursue answers, protect your financial future, and hold the responsible person, business, or organization accountable.

If your family lost a loved one in Everett, call (425) 740-0344 or request a free case review today. There is no fee to speak with our team, and you do not pay attorney fees unless we recover compensation for your family.

Compassionate Legal Help After a Fatal Accident in Everett

Losing a loved one suddenly can leave a family facing grief, shock, funeral expenses, medical bills, income loss, insurance calls, and unanswered questions. The legal process may feel impossible to think about while your family is trying to get through the first days and weeks after the loss.

Strong Law helps families take the next step without adding pressure. Our team can investigate what happened, preserve evidence, handle insurance communication, explain Washington wrongful death law, and help your family understand whether a claim may be available.

Fatal accidents in Everett may happen on I-5, SR 526, the US 2 trestle, Evergreen Way, Broadway, Everett Mall Way, Marine View Drive, near the Port of Everett, or in residential, workplace, or commercial areas throughout Snohomish County. Wherever the incident happened, early evidence can matter.

What Does an Everett Wrongful Death Lawyer Do?

An Everett wrongful death lawyer investigates the fatal incident, identifies who may be responsible, determines who may benefit from the claim, gathers evidence, works with insurance companies, documents the family’s losses, and seeks compensation through an insurance settlement or lawsuit.

That work may include reviewing:

  • Police reports
  • Crash reports
  • Medical records
  • Death certificates
  • Coroner or medical examiner findings
  • Photos and videos from the scene
  • Witness statements
  • Insurance communications
  • Employment and wage records
  • Vehicle data or commercial records when applicable
  • Property records or incident reports when applicable
  • Expert analysis when needed

Strong Law also helps families understand the role of the personal representative, which family members may benefit from the claim, and how Washington law treats wrongful death and survival actions.

When Can a Family Bring a Wrongful Death Claim in Washington?

Under Washington wrongful death law, a claim may be available when a person’s death is caused by another person’s wrongful act, neglect, or default. In plain English, that means a claim may exist when someone’s careless, reckless, or wrongful conduct causes a death.

These claims often arise after fatal collisions, unsafe driving, dangerous property conditions, commercial vehicle crashes, workplace-related third-party incidents, or other preventable events.

A wrongful death case is not only about proving that a death occurred. It is about proving that another person, company, or organization caused the death by failing to meet a basic legal duty.

Who Can Benefit From a Washington Wrongful Death Claim?

Washington wrongful death claims are brought for the benefit of certain family members. Under RCW 4.20.020, these may include the surviving spouse, state registered domestic partner, children, and stepchildren. If there is no spouse, domestic partner, child, or stepchild, the claim may be brought for the benefit of the deceased person’s parents or siblings.

This part of the process can be confusing for families. Some people assume the closest family member can simply file the claim directly. In Washington, the personal representative has an important legal role.

A personal representative is the person legally allowed to bring the claim for the estate. Strong Law can help your family understand how that role fits into the case and what steps may need to happen before the claim moves forward.

What Is the Difference Between a Wrongful Death Claim and a Survival Action?

A wrongful death claim and a survival action are related, but they are not the same thing.

A wrongful death claim focuses on the losses suffered by eligible family members because their loved one died. This may include loss of financial support, companionship, care, guidance, and emotional support.

A survival action is different. Under Washington’s survival statute, certain claims may survive to the personal representative. In plain English, that means the estate may have a separate claim for losses your loved one may have been able to bring if they had survived. Depending on the facts, this may include medical expenses, lost income, or certain pain and suffering your loved one experienced before death.

In some cases, both types of claims may matter. Strong Law can evaluate whether the facts support a wrongful death claim, a survival action, or both.

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Common Accidents That Can Lead to Wrongful Death Claims in Everett

A wrongful death claim can arise from many types of preventable incidents. The key question is whether another person, business, driver, property owner, or company caused the death through negligence or wrongful conduct.

Fatal Car Accidents

Fatal car accidents may involve speeding, distracted driving, impaired driving, failure to yield, unsafe lane changes, red-light violations, or reckless behavior. Strong Law can help families investigate fault, insurance coverage, crash evidence, medical records, and the long-term impact of the loss.

If your loved one died after a collision involving another driver, our Everett car accident lawyers can help review crash evidence, insurance issues, and fault disputes.

Fatal Truck Accidents

Fatal truck crashes can involve driver fatigue, unsafe loading, poor maintenance, commercial insurance, black box data, driver logs, trucking company records, and multiple responsible parties. These cases often require fast action to preserve evidence before it is lost or overwritten.

Strong Law also handles fatal crashes involving semi-trucks, delivery trucks, and other commercial vehicles. Our Everett truck accident lawyer can review trucking company records, maintenance history, driver logs, and other evidence that may matter after a fatal commercial vehicle crash.

Fatal Motorcycle Accidents

Motorcyclists are highly vulnerable when drivers fail to check blind spots, turn left across traffic, follow too closely, or drive distracted. Wrongful death claims involving motorcycles may require evidence that pushes back against unfair assumptions about riders.

Our Everett motorcycle accident lawyer can help families review crash evidence, roadway conditions, driver behavior, and insurance issues after a fatal motorcycle collision.

Pedestrian and Bicycle Deaths

Pedestrians and cyclists face serious risks when drivers fail to yield, speed through intersections, ignore crosswalks, drive distracted, or fail to see vulnerable road users. Evidence may include traffic camera footage, witness statements, roadway design, vehicle damage, and crash reconstruction.

Strong Law helps families after fatal pedestrian accidents in Everett and serious bicycle crashes, including incidents involving crosswalks, bike lanes, intersections, parking lots, and high-traffic roads.

Fatal Brain Injuries and Catastrophic Injuries

Some wrongful death cases begin as severe injury cases. A loved one may suffer a traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, internal injury, crush injury, amputation, or other catastrophic harm before passing away.

When a fatal accident involves life-changing trauma before death, Strong Law can evaluate how evidence from a brain injury claim or catastrophic injury claim may affect the wrongful death case.

Dangerous Property and Premises Incidents

Fatal premises incidents may involve unsafe property conditions, negligent security, dangerous walkways, unsafe stairs, poor lighting, falls, drowning hazards, or other preventable dangers. These cases often turn on what the property owner knew or should have known before the incident.

Work-Related Third-Party Fatalities

Some fatal workplace incidents involve a party other than the employer, such as a subcontractor, negligent driver, property owner, equipment company, or another outside party. These cases may involve both workers’ compensation issues and a separate third-party wrongful death claim.

How Do You Prove Negligence in a Wrongful Death Case?

Wrongful death claims depend on evidence. To prove negligence, the case generally needs to show that the responsible party had a legal duty, failed to meet that duty, caused the fatal incident, and caused losses to the surviving family members or estate.

That may involve proving:

  • The responsible party had a duty to act with reasonable care
  • The responsible party failed to meet that duty
  • That failure caused the incident that led to death
  • The death caused financial, emotional, and practical losses

For example, a driver has a duty to follow traffic laws and pay attention to the road. A trucking company has a duty to follow safety rules and maintain safe vehicles. A property owner may have a duty to fix or warn about dangerous conditions. When those duties are ignored and a death results, a wrongful death claim may be available.

Strong Law can gather evidence such as police reports, crash data, medical records, witness statements, inspection records, video footage, expert opinions, and insurance documents to build the case.

What Damages May Be Available in a Washington Wrongful Death Claim?

No amount of compensation can replace your loved one. A wrongful death claim is meant to provide financial stability, accountability, and support for the losses caused by the death.

Depending on the facts, compensation may include financial losses and personal losses.

Financial losses, sometimes called economic damages, may include:

  • Medical expenses related to the final injury
  • Funeral expenses
  • Burial or cremation costs
  • Lost income the deceased person would have earned
  • Lost benefits
  • Loss of financial support
  • Household services the deceased person provided
  • Other out-of-pocket costs connected to the death

Personal losses, sometimes called non-economic damages, may include:

  • Loss of companionship
  • Loss of care
  • Loss of guidance
  • Loss of emotional support
  • Loss of the relationship with the deceased person
  • The emotional impact on surviving family members

The value of a wrongful death case depends on the relationship between the deceased person and the family members, the evidence, the cause of death, the age and earning history of the deceased person, available insurance coverage, and the long-term impact on the family.

What Evidence Matters After a Fatal Accident?

Evidence can disappear quickly after a fatal accident. Vehicles may be repaired, video footage may be overwritten, physical evidence may be moved, and witnesses may become harder to reach. Families should not have to investigate alone, but early legal help can protect important information.

Important evidence may include:

  • Police reports
  • Crash reports
  • Photos and videos from the scene
  • Witness names and contact information
  • Traffic camera or dashcam footage
  • Medical records
  • Death certificate
  • Coroner or medical examiner records
  • Vehicle damage photos
  • Commercial driver records when applicable
  • Black box or electronic vehicle data when applicable
  • Property incident reports when applicable
  • Insurance letters and claim numbers
  • Employment and financial records

Strong Law can begin preserving evidence before your family is ready to make every legal decision. That allows your family to protect the claim while taking the time needed to grieve and understand your options.

How Long Do Families Have to File a Wrongful Death Claim in Washington?

Many Washington wrongful death lawsuits are subject to a three-year filing deadline under RCW 4.16.080. Some cases may involve different deadlines or special notice requirements, especially when a government entity may be involved.

Even when the deadline seems far away, waiting can hurt the case. Evidence may disappear, witnesses may become harder to locate, and insurance companies may use delays to dispute what happened.

Contacting an attorney early does not mean your family has to rush into a lawsuit. It means evidence can be protected, deadlines can be tracked, and your family can make informed decisions when ready.

Why Choose Strong Law for an Everett Wrongful Death Case?

Wrongful death cases require careful legal work and a respectful approach. Families need answers, accountability, and guidance, but they also need space to grieve.

Strong Law Accident & Injury Attorneys is led by attorney Jed Strong, whose background includes experience working with insurance defense. That perspective helps our team understand how insurance companies evaluate serious injury and wrongful death claims, dispute damages, shift blame, and decide when to settle.

Our team prepares wrongful death cases with the evidence needed to show what happened, who was responsible, and how the death affected the family. We work to keep families informed without overwhelming them with unnecessary legal pressure.

Families choose Strong Law because we offer:

  • Free case evaluations
  • No upfront attorney fees
  • No attorney fees unless we recover compensation
  • Experience dealing with insurance companies
  • Serious injury and wrongful death experience
  • Careful evidence preservation
  • Clear communication throughout the case
  • Litigation preparation when needed

For families who are still trying to understand whether a fatal accident may involve a broader injury claim, our Everett personal injury lawyers can review the situation and explain the next steps.

Frequently Asked Questions About Everett Wrongful Death Claims

How much does it cost to hire an Everett wrongful death lawyer?

Strong Law handles wrongful death cases on a contingency fee basis. That means you do not pay attorney fees upfront. We only get paid if we recover compensation for your family through a settlement or award.

Who files a wrongful death claim in Washington?

In Washington, wrongful death claims are generally brought by the personal representative of the deceased person’s estate for the benefit of eligible family members. These may include a surviving spouse, state registered domestic partner, children, stepchildren, parents, or siblings depending on the family situation.

What is the difference between wrongful death and a survival action?

A wrongful death claim focuses on the losses suffered by surviving family members because their loved one died. A survival action focuses on losses that belonged to the deceased person or the estate, including certain losses the deceased person may have experienced before death.

What compensation can be recovered in a wrongful death claim?

Compensation may include funeral costs, burial expenses, medical expenses related to the final injury, lost income, lost benefits, loss of financial support, loss of companionship, loss of care, loss of guidance, and other losses tied to the death.

How long does a family have to file a wrongful death claim in Washington?

Many Washington wrongful death lawsuits are subject to a three-year deadline, but some cases may involve shorter deadlines or special notice rules. Families should get legal guidance early so evidence and deadlines are protected.

What if the insurance company blames my loved one?

The insurance company may try to reduce responsibility by blaming the person who died or another party. Evidence such as crash reports, witness statements, video footage, vehicle data, medical records, expert analysis, and scene evidence can help push back against unsupported blame.

Can a wrongful death claim involve a company, not just a person?

Yes. A wrongful death claim may involve a company if a business, trucking company, property owner, employer-related third party, manufacturer, contractor, or other organization contributed to the death through negligence or wrongful conduct.

Should we contact a lawyer if we are not ready to file a lawsuit?

Yes. Speaking with a lawyer does not mean your family has to file a lawsuit immediately. It can help preserve evidence, identify deadlines, understand insurance issues, and protect your family’s options while you decide what to do next.

Talk With an Everett Wrongful Death Lawyer

If your family lost a loved one in Everett or anywhere in Snohomish County, Strong Law Accident & Injury Attorneys can help you understand your options. Our team can investigate the fatal incident, preserve evidence, deal with insurance companies, and pursue accountability under Washington law.

Call (425) 740-0344 or request a free consultation today. There is no fee to speak with us, and you do not pay attorney fees unless we recover compensation for your family.

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