Cargo theft continues to plague fleet owners across the U.S., with industry losses reaching $6.6 billion annually. To help protect freight in transit, Wabash developed TrailerHawk, an AI-powered cargo assurance solution that the trailer manufacturer calls the most comprehensive of its kind.
“We’re combating strategic theft all the way down to the driver, at the load level, and eliminating so much OS&D (overages, shortages, and damages),” said Brett Suma, managing director at Wabash and CEO of TrailerHawk, which Wabash acquired in February 2025. “We wanted to provide an end-to-end chain of custody for both the asset and the cargo, so we built the software to power it.”
Originally developed to protect its own assets and cargo, TrailerHawk integrates several components, including computer vision, facial recognition, and digital locking systems, to secure freight in transit. The new trailer technology was unveiled during the shipper-focused Manifest conference earlier this month.
Drivers must register for the platform, provide their commercial driver’s licenses, and verify their identities using mobile biometrics before accessing the application. After arriving at a trailer, they complete an acquisition process that includes photographing the tractor’s license plate and DOT registration information.
“We know the driver is who they say they are, the tractor is what it’s supposed to be, and the carrier is who it’s supposed to be,” Suma said, adding that all three elements are continuously validated throughout the haul to maintain chain-of-custody integrity. If any element falls out of continuity during a trip, the system generates real-time alerts and notifies designated stakeholders via their preferred channels.
As shippers load pallets into trailers, TrailerHawk records the activity.
“We know who was operating the forklift and how many pallets they loaded,” Suma said. “We know the latitude and longitude. When they’re done, we know they closed the trailer door and locked it from the interior, creating a digital seal.”
That digital seal tracks all lock and unlock events and can be configured to disengage only within a predefined geofence if shippers choose.
TrailerHawk secures trailers using a three-point locking mechanism that Suma described as “very, very difficult” to penetrate. If tampering does occur, the system immediately records the activity at the trailer door.



