From Dock to Door, We Hold Negligence Accountable.
Warehouses, distribution centers, ports, and last-mile delivery networks are the backbone of the supply chain—and some of the most dangerous workplaces and roadways. When preventable failures in training, maintenance, staffing, or safety oversight lead to catastrophic injury or wrongful death, we act quickly to protect families, preserve evidence, and hold every responsible party to account.
Supply chain cases are complex. They often involve multiple corporate defendants, layered insurance, and strict safety and industry standards. Our team is built for that complexity—and for the stakes. We pursue full accountability and the compensation clients need to rebuild.

Supply Chain, Warehouse & Logistics Injury Lawyers
With decades of experience in catastrophic injury and wrongful death litigation, McEldrew Purtell evaluates supply-chain incidents from the warehouse floor to the loading dock to the delivery route. We investigate operational breakdowns (training, supervision, shift pressures), equipment failures (forklifts, pallet jacks, conveyors), and corporate safety violations to determine how negligence—and whose negligence—caused the harm. Our attorneys work with industrial safety experts, accident reconstructionists, and medical and economic specialists to build trial-ready cases.
Our Results
McEldrew Purtell has a proven track record of maximizing recovery for our clients.
Results may vary depending on your particular facts and legal circumstances.

Navigating Supply‑Chain Catastrophic Injuries and Wrongful Deaths: Resource Guide
This guide provides an assertive, step-by-step overview of supply chain lawsuits – from understanding what qualifies as a case, to navigating the legal process, to securing fair compensation. It is nationwide in scope and geared toward victims of severe injury or wrongful death.
Ways We Can Help
Supply chain incidents can cause life-changing harm and are often defended aggressively. We’re prepared to lead comprehensive investigations, manage multiple insurers, and fight for justice in the following case types:
Forklift & Powered Industrial Truck Accidents
Rollovers, struck-by, tip-overs, and crush injuries stemming from inadequate training, lack of spotters, poor aisle design, defective components, or ignored maintenance logs.
Loading Dock & Yard Injuries
Dock-plate failures, trailer creep, unsecured chocks, truck-to-dock communication breakdowns, and blind-spot backing events—often involving multiple contractors (carriers, warehouse operators, 3PLs).
Cargo Loading/Unloading & Securement Failures
Falling freight, over-stacked pallets, shifting loads, or improper tie-downs that injure workers on site or cause downstream roadway crashes during transit.
Conveyor, Pallet Jack & Material Handling Equipment Defects
Pinch-point, entanglement, and runaway equipment incidents tied to missing guards, inadequate lockout/tagout, or product defects and recalls.
Premises Liability at Warehouses & Distribution Centers
Hazardous floor conditions, inadequate lighting or signage, blocked egress, and unsafe traffic patterns between pedestrians, forklifts, and yard trucks.
Last-Mile & Commercial Delivery Vehicle Crashes
Fatigue, unrealistic delivery quotas, distracted driving, poor route design, and negligent hiring/supervision by delivery contractors and gig-economy fleets.
Maritime/Port & Intermodal Operations
Straddle carrier, reach stacker, and container yard incidents; failures in hand-off between modes (ship–rail–truck) and inadequate terminal safety protocols.
Contractor/Staffing Agency Negligence
Insufficient training, supervision, and safety oversight of temporary labor performing high-risk warehouse and loading tasks.
Corporate Negligence & Safety Violations
Systemic shortcuts—missed maintenance, unsafe production targets, falsified checklists, ignored near-misses—demand corporate-level accountability.
Don’t Just Take Our Word For It
Hear From Our Clients
At McEldrew Purtell, results matter and so does the way we achieve them. While our case outcomes reflect our tenacity in court and at the negotiation table, it’s the voices of our clients that truly capture who we are and why we do this work.
We represent people at the worst moments of their lives: after catastrophic injuries, workplace tragedies, and preventable losses. Through every case, we aim to deliver not just compensation but clarity, confidence, and care.
If you’re considering working with a Philadelphia trial lawyer, we invite you to read what our clients have said about their experiences with McEldrew Purtell. Their words are the most powerful testament to our values, our dedication, and our results.
Learn More
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FAQs
Get answers to commonly asked questions regarding supply chain injuries and learn how we can help with your case.
What makes supply chain injury cases different from other workplace or vehicle cases?
They typically involve multiple companies (warehouse owners, 3PLs, carriers, staffing agencies, equipment manufacturers) and overlapping insurance policies and safety rules. That complexity demands fast evidence preservation and a coordinated legal strategy.
Who can be held liable in supply chain cases?
Potentially: warehouse or facility owners/tenants, third-party logistics providers, motor carriers and delivery contractors, staffing agencies, equipment manufacturers and maintenance vendors, and property management companies—plus any negligent drivers involved in yard or roadway incidents.
If I’m an employee receiving workers’ compensation, can I still have a case?
Often, yes. Workers’ comp may bar claims against your direct employer, but third-party claims can exist against other negligent companies (e.g., a 3PL, trucker, equipment manufacturer, or premises owner). We evaluate all avenues.
What evidence should be preserved after a forklift or dock incident?
Incident reports, CCTV, telematics, maintenance logs, pre-shift checklists, dock controls data, load diagrams, staffing/dispatch records, training certifications, contractor agreements, and the equipment itself (without alteration). We send preservation (spoliation) notices immediately.
How are delivery-vehicle cases within the supply chain unique?
Coverage can shift based on contractor status, whether the driver was on an active route, and layered corporate policies. Establishing control and supervision (not just labels like “independent contractor”) is critical to reach the right insurers.
What damages can victims and families recover in supply chain injury cases?
Medical expenses, future care and rehab, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, scarring/disfigurement, and, in wrongful death cases, funeral expenses and loss of support/companionship.