You’re traveling eastbound on I-64 approaching the 264E exit, trying to merge three lanes to the right in heavy traffic. A tourist in a rental car suddenly cuts across two lanes to catch the exit they almost missed. You slam on your brakes. The car behind you doesn’t. You’re rear-ended at 55+ mph.
This exact scenario happens all the time on I-64 in Hampton Roads. The interstate that connects our entire region is also one of the most dangerous stretches of highway on the East Coast.
If you’ve been injured in an accident anywhere along the I-64 corridor, you need an attorney who knows this highway intimately, not just the law, but the specific exits where accidents cluster, which hospitals are closest to each zone, how to obtain traffic camera footage before it’s deleted, and which jurisdiction handles your case depending on exactly where you crashed. You need Decker Law.
I-64 in Hampton Roads: A Unique and Dangerous Corridor
The numbers tell the story:
- 30+ miles connecting 7 cities (Newport News, Hampton, Norfolk, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Virginia Beach)
- 200,000+ vehicles daily (higher during summer beach season)
- Multiple chokepoints (two bridge-tunnels, major interchanges)
- Mix of local commuters, tourists, military personnel, and commercial trucks
- An Accident rate that’s 40% higher than Virginia state average for interstate highways
What makes I-64 uniquely dangerous here:
- Tourist confusion: Rental cars, GPS dependence, sudden lane changes, missed exits
- Military traffic: Young drivers (ages 18-25), base shift changes creating mass exodus, aggressive driving
- Port truckers: Heavy commercial traffic to/from Port of Virginia, cargo spills, truck crashes
- Hurricane evacuations: Entire region evacuates west on I-64, contraflow lanes, accidents block escape routes
- Multiple jurisdictions: Your accident at Exit 278 is Norfolk; Exit 282 is Virginia Beach; affects everything from police response to which court handles your case
After an I-64 Accident: Critical Next Steps
- Pull as far off the travel lanes as possible if your vehicle is drivable
Stopping on I-64 travel lanes is extremely dangerous as you risk being hit by traffic. If possible:
- Get out of the travel lanes
- Pull onto a safe shoulder
- Call 911 from safe location
If your vehicle is disabled:
- Get out of the vehicle and move away from traffic (behind the guardrail if available)
- Call 911 immediately
- Do not stand near your vehicle
- Note your exact location
This is critical for evidence preservation. Note:
-
- Exit numbers: “Eastbound I-64 between Exit 280 and Exit 281”
- Mile markers: If visible
- Landmarks: “Near High Rise Bridge,” “Just past Virginia Beach Boulevard exit”
- Pictures: Take pictures of vehicles, landmarks, and highway signs
Why exact location matters: VDOT traffic cameras are positioned every 1-2 miles. If we don’t know exactly where your accident occurred, we can’t request the right camera footage.
- Call 911
- Virginia State Police typically respond to I-64 main lane accidents
- Local police respond if the accident occurs after exiting to a city street
- Don’t assume “it’s not serious enough” to call, always call for I-64 accidents
- Take photos from a safe location
Take pictures of:
- Vehicle damage (all angles)
- Road signs showing location
- Traffic conditions
- Weather conditions
- Any visible injuries
- Go to hospital immediately
Don’t drive home thinking “I’ll see how I feel tomorrow.” Adrenaline masks injuries. Go to nearest emergency room:
Nearest hospitals to each I-64 zone:
- Newport News/Hampton (Exits 255-262): Riverside Regional, Sentara CarePlex
- Norfolk (Exits 264-278): Sentara Norfolk General Sentara Leigh
- Virginia Beach (Exits 282-289): Sentara Virginia Beach General, Sentara Princess Anne
- Chesapeake (Exit 289+): Chesapeake Regional Medical Center
The 30-Day Evidence Urgency: Traffic Camera Footage
This is critical and time-sensitive:
VDOT operates traffic cameras every 1-2 miles along I-64 Hampton Roads. These cameras are recorded 24/7 and capture:
- Accident causation (which vehicle caused the crash)
- Speed of vehicles
- Traffic conditions
- Weather conditions
- Contributing factors (sudden lane changes, aggressive driving)
Depending on the source, if we don’t request footage within 30 days of your accident, it might be deleted forever.
This is why you must contact an attorney immediately after an I-64 accident. We submit Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to VDOT and private entities for traffic camera footage, but we need:
- Exact date and time of accident
- Exact location (exit numbers, mile markers)
- Direction of travel (eastbound or westbound)
Many clients wait 6-8 weeks before calling an attorney, thinking they’ll “see how injuries develop.” By then, the video evidence proving the other driver’s fault might be gone forever.
If you’re injured in an I-64 accident, call Decker Law at 757-622-3317—ideally within 24-48 hours. We’ll request traffic camera footage before it’s deleted. This footage is often the difference between proving 100% other-driver fault (required under Virginia’s contributory negligence rule) and losing your case because evidence disappeared.
Virginia State Police vs. Local Police: Why It Matters
Virginia State Police jurisdiction:
- All I-64 main lanes
- Most accidents on I-64 corridor
- Thorough, detailed reports
- Neutral (no local jurisdiction bias)
- Reports include diagrams, measurements, witness statements
Local police jurisdiction:
- Accidents that occur after exiting I-64 (on exit ramps or city streets)
- Sometimes respond to I-64 accidents if VSP is unavailable
Report differences:
Local police reports should include:
- Driver contact info and insurance info
- Detailed diagrams showing vehicle positions
- Thorough witness interviews
- Officer’s causation opinion
Obtaining reports:
VSP reports can take 30 days to complete or become available. Your attorney can sometimes expedite by having direct relationships with VSP offices.
Multi-Jurisdiction Complexity: Why Location Determines Everything
Your accident location determines:
- Which police agency responds (VSP, Norfolk PD, Virginia Beach PD, etc.)
- Which court handles your case (Norfolk Circuit Court vs. Virginia Beach Circuit Court)
- Which jury pool (Norfolk juries vs. Virginia Beach juries have different characteristics)
- Venue for lawsuit (if your case goes to trial)
Example of how much location matters:
Accident at Exit 278 (Norfolk):
- Norfolk Police or VSP respond
- Case filed in Norfolk Circuit Court
- Norfolk jury pool (usually more generous jury awards, slightly more plaintiff-friendly)
Accident at Exit 282 (Virginia Beach):
- Virginia Beach Police or VSP respond
- Case filed in Virginia Beach Circuit Court
- Virginia Beach jury pool (can be more conservative jury awards)
The difference between winning $150,000 in Norfolk Circuit Court vs. $75,000 in Virginia Beach Circuit Court can literally depend on which side of the city line your accident occurred.
This is why hiring a local attorney who practices in all seven Hampton Roads jurisdictions matters. We know the judges, the juries, and the subtle differences in how each court handles personal injury cases.
If you’ve been hurt in an accident, call Decker Law at 757-622-3317 to schedule your free consultation.
Multi-Vehicle Chain Reaction Crashes (Common on I-64)
I-64’s high traffic volume and frequent stop-and-go conditions create multi-vehicle chain reaction crashes:
Typical scenario:
- Traffic stops suddenly (accident ahead, traffic jam)
- First vehicle stops safely
- Second vehicle stops safely
- Third vehicle doesn’t brake in time, rear-ends second vehicle
- Impact pushes second vehicle into first vehicle
- Fourth vehicle rear-ends third vehicle
- Five-car pileup results
Liability questions:
- Who’s at fault? The driver who started the chain reaction? All drivers who hit vehicles in front of them?
- Virginia contributory negligence complicates this: If you’re hit from behind but the jury decides you stopped “too suddenly,” you could be found contributory negligent and recover $0
- Multiple insurance companies involved
- Complex claims process
These cases require experienced attorneys who know how to prove the chain of causation and which drivers bear responsibility.
Commercial Truck Accidents: Higher Stakes, Better Insurance
Commercial truck accidents differ from passenger vehicle accidents:
Federal regulations apply:
- Hours of service (drivers limited on driving hours)
- Maintenance requirements (regular inspections, documentation)
- Weight limits
- Cargo securement
Black box data:
Trucks have event data recorders showing:
- Speed before impact
- Braking
- Hours driven that day
- Mechanical issues
Multiple liable parties:
- Truck driver
- Trucking company (vicarious liability for driver’s negligence)
- Cargo shipper (if improperly loaded cargo contributed)
- Maintenance company (if mechanical failure contributed)
Higher insurance policies:
Commercial trucks usually carry $1 million+ policies (vs. $50,000-$100,000 for passenger vehicles). This means significantly higher settlement potential.
Why You Need a Local I-64 Attorney
We drive I-64 every day. We know:
- Every dangerous merge point
- Which exits have the worst accident rates
- Typical traffic patterns by time and season
- Which hospitals are closest to each exit
- How to obtain traffic camera footage before it’s deleted
We have relationships with Virginia State Police for expedited report requests and have usually worked with the officers before
We know the jurisdictional complexities, which exit means which police agency, which court, which jury pool.
We practice in all seven Hampton Roads jurisdictions, Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Hampton, Newport News, Suffolk. We know the judges and the juries in each courthouse.
We work with local accident reconstruction experts who know I-64 intimately and can recreate your accident using site-specific factors.
We’ve handled 500+ I-64 accident cases across the entire Hampton Roads corridor. We know how to prove fault, preserve evidence, and maximize recovery regardless of where on I-64 your accident occurred.
Call Immediately: Time Is Critical
If you’ve been injured in an accident on I-64 anywhere from Newport News to Virginia Beach, call Decker Law at 757-622-3317 immediately.
Why immediate action matters:
- Traffic camera footage deleted after 30 days
- Witnesses’ memories fade
- Defendants’ insurance companies begin investigating immediately (looking for ways to blame you under Virginia’s contributory negligence rule)
- Medical documentation strongest when treatment begins immediately
We offer free consultations and work on contingency (no fees unless we recover for you).
We can meet you at the hospital if you’re still receiving treatment.
We’ll handle everything:
- Request traffic camera footage before deletion
- Obtain police reports
- Interview witnesses
- Document your injuries
- Deal with insurance companies
- Negotiate settlements or take your case to trial
Don’t let I-64 accident evidence disappear while you’re recovering from injuries. Let us preserve your evidence and fight for the compensation you deserve.
One phone call starts the process. Call 757-622-3317 now.
Decker Law • Norfolk, Virginia • 757-622-3317
Experienced Personal Injury attorneys throughout Hampton Roads, including Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Hampton, and Newport News.











