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Auto vs Pedestrian
Elderly woman crossing busy street with walker device

$1.225M Settlement Reached in Fairfax County Parking Lot Crash That Caused Permanent Loss of Taste and Smell

A 70-year-old plaintiff settled a motor vehicle negligence claim for $1.225 million in Fairfax County Circuit Court on April 14, 2026, after a passing vehicle struck the plaintiff's parked car at full speed in a Burke, Virginia parking lot, launching the parked car onto a raised median where it slammed into the plaintiff who was standing nearby. The settlement was reached shortly after the filing of suit and was secured by Brian Glass of Ben Glass Law in Fairfax, Virginia. The plaintiff suffered traumatic brain injuries, multiple rib fractures, a collapsed lung, and the permanent loss of taste and smell.Case at a Glance Settlement: $1,225,000 Case Type: Motor Vehicle Negligence Court: Fairfax County Circuit Court, Virginia Settlement Date: April 14, 2026 Plaintiff: 70-year-old (name not disclosed) Defendant: Not disclosed Plaintiff Attorney: Brian Glass, Ben Glass Law (Fairfax, VA) Special Damages: $117,980.71How Did the Burke Parking Lot Crash Happen? The collision occurred in a parking lot in Burke, Virginia. A moving vehicle struck the plaintiff's parked car at speed, sending the parked car up onto a raised median in the lot. The plaintiff was standing near the median when the launched vehicle struck the plaintiff and caused a loss of consciousness. The mechanism of injury was unusual. A moving car striking a parked car, with the parked car then striking the standing plaintiff, produced a pedestrian-style impact at significant force. Emergency responders transported the plaintiff to the Inova Fairfax Hospital Trauma Center.What Injuries Did the Plaintiff Suffer? The injuries documented in the case were severe and, in several respects, permanent. The plaintiff sustained: Traumatic brain injuries: a skull fracture, intracranial hemorrhage, and multiple hemorrhagic brain contusions Chest and lung injuries: multiple rib fractures, a collapsed lung, and hemothorax (blood in the chest cavity) Asymmetric sensorineural hearing loss Permanent loss of smell (anosmia) and loss of taste (ageusia) The permanent loss of smell and taste is a defining feature of this case. Anosmia and ageusia are recognized complications of significant head trauma and are generally considered permanent once established. Beyond the obvious quality-of-life impact, the inability to smell smoke, gas, or spoiled food carries real safety consequences for an older plaintiff living independently.What Did Treatment and Recovery Require? The plaintiff was hospitalized for nine days at Inova Fairfax Hospital Trauma Center. After discharge, the plaintiff required two months of professional nursing care at home, along with physical therapy and vestibular rehabilitation to address balance issues stemming from the head and inner-ear injuries. Special damages, the documented medical and out-of-pocket economic losses, totaled $117,980.71.Why Did the Case Settle Before Trial? The case was resolved shortly after the filing of suit. Several factors likely contributed to the early settlement: a clear liability story in which a moving vehicle struck a stationary one, a sympathetic 70-year-old plaintiff with documented trauma-center treatment, and a permanent sensory injury component that is difficult to minimize at trial. For Virginia plaintiff attorneys, the case offers a useful reference point for valuing motor vehicle claims that involve traumatic brain injury alongside permanent sensory loss, particularly in an older plaintiff. The settlement figure of $1.225 million against roughly $118,000 in special damages reflects a multiplier driven heavily by the permanent and quality-of-life injury components rather than by economic loss alone. Additional Virginia personal injury verdicts and settlements are tracked in the Virginia verdict news archive. Settlements like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements, for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself.Frequently Asked Questions Q: Who represented the plaintiff in this Fairfax County settlement? Brian Glass of Ben Glass Law in Fairfax, Virginia represented the plaintiff. The case settled for $1.225 million in Fairfax County Circuit Court shortly after suit was filed. Q: How are permanent loss of taste and smell valued in personal injury cases? Anosmia (loss of smell) and ageusia (loss of taste) are typically classified as permanent quality-of-life injuries with significant non-economic damage value. They affect daily safety and enjoyment of life and often weigh heavily in jury awards or settlement valuations, especially when accompanied by traumatic brain injury, as in this case. Q: Where can I find more Virginia verdicts and settlements? Major Verdict tracks plaintiff verdicts and settlements across Virginia, including results from Fairfax County, Richmond, and Norfolk. The Virginia verdict news archive lists recent cases by jurisdiction and case type.

Commercial Trucking Crash

$2.25M Virginia Verdict in Tractor-Trailer Crash That Killed 17-Year-Old Keon Couch

A Newport News jury awarded $2.25 million Thursday to the family of a Virginia teenager killed after a commercial truck driver illegally parked his rig in a live travel lane and walked into a fast food restaurant. The verdict caps a six-day trial that put trucking company liability, driver negligence, and causation squarely before a Virginia jury.What Happened on Jefferson Avenue In March 2023, USA Truck driver Leonard Couplin parked his tractor-trailer in the right lane of Jefferson Avenue in Newport News, Virginia, and left the vehicle unattended to enter a nearby restaurant. Keon Couch, 17, was a passenger in a car driven by Carlos Palmer, then 16. As Palmer's vehicle approached the stopped big rig, it struck two other cars before colliding with the parked tractor-trailer. That final collision killed Couch. USA Truck and Couplin did not contest the parking violation. Their defense centered entirely on causation arguing that Palmer's driving, not the unattended truck, was the actual cause of the wreck.The Defense Argument: Palmer's Driving Was the Sole Cause Defense attorney Ashley Winsky of Moran Reeves Conn told jurors that the tractor-trailer was visible and had its hazard lights flashing immediately before the crash. She argued that Palmer was speeding, tailgating, and made a blind lane change that set the collision in motion. "Our argument is that the sole proximate cause of this accident was Carlos Palmer's reckless driving," Winsky told the jury. "He didn't look. He just made a blind lane change when his whole view was blocked."The Plaintiff's Case: Parking a Big Rig in a Live Lane Created a Fatal Hazard Joseph Fried of Fried Goldberg, representing Couch's family, argued that Couplin violated his training and multiple trucking rules by stopping in the roadway and abandoning the vehicle. He acknowledged that Palmer's car struck other vehicles first -- but emphasized that it was the collision with the parked tractor-trailer that proved fatal. "Part of our problem with the parking out there is because it adds so much more risk," Fried told jurors. "It was the configuration of that trailer. If this had been almost anything else the vehicle collided with, we wouldn't be here today." Fried requested between approximately $34 million and $38 million in compensatory damages, plus a finding that punitive damages were warranted.The Verdict: $2.25 Million, No Punitives Jurors sided with the plaintiff on liability, awarding $2.25 million in total damages: $950,000 to each of Couch's two siblings $350,000 to Couch's mother The jury declined to award punitive damages. In a post-verdict statement to CVN, Fried said: "I am extremely proud of the case that we tried, even though the verdict was less than we hoped to achieve. It was a very hard fought case on both liability and damages." Fried noted that a challenging family dynamic affected the damages phase, particularly the award to Couch's mother. "The challenge for me was to explain that, despite these facts, the relationship was a special one and warranted a substantial verdict under Virginia law," he wrote. Winsky, for her part, told CVN the jury "returned a fair verdict that was consistent with our valuation of the case." She added that the defense took the case to trial because it viewed the plaintiff's financial demand as excessive, and cited concerns about nuclear verdicts in the transportation industry.What This Verdict Signals for Trucking Liability Cases This case illustrates one of the more common battlegrounds in commercial trucking litigation: a defendant who concedes a safety violation but disputes whether that violation actually caused the harm. Couplin's improper parking was never in dispute. USA Truck's entire defense rested on the argument that an intervening act -- Palmer's driving -- broke the chain of causation. Virginia juries, like most, weigh proximate cause carefully. Here, they found the parked tractor-trailer bore enough responsibility to hold the defendants liable, even without awarding punitive damages. For plaintiff attorneys handling trucking cases, this outcome underscores the importance of framing causation arguments around the specific danger created by the defendant's conduct -- not just the sequence of events leading to impact. Attorneys who have tried trucking and wrongful death cases can showcase their results on Major Verdict, where plaintiff lawyers build public profiles featuring detailed trial outcomes and notable settlements. The platform gives the plaintiff bar a dedicated space to establish credibility and connect with potential clients researching attorneys by verdict history.About the Case Case: Etheridge v. USA Truck, LLC, et al., CL2304235H-00 Court: Virginia 7th Circuit State Court, Newport News Verdict date: February 25, 2026 Verdict: $2.25 million (compensatory); no punitive damages Plaintiff counsel: Joseph Fried, Fried Goldberg Families who have lost someone in a commercial truck crash can learn about the legal process through Virginia's personal injury resources at Major Verdict, or find a plaintiff attorney with a proven trial record in their state.


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