Many DUI cases aren’t disputed because “nobody was drinking.” They’re disputed because the defense argues the record doesn’t prove impairment the way it needs to—at the time it matters—or that the crash wasn’t caused by the alleged impairment.
In Casselberry, common factors can include:
- Nighttime traffic after restaurants and bars (delayed reporting and fading witness memories)
- Roadway lighting and visibility issues (questions about what officers and witnesses could actually see)
- Busy intersection and commuting corridors (conflicting accounts about lane position, speed, and sequence of events)
- Construction and changing traffic patterns (defense attempts to attribute the crash to road conditions rather than driving impairment)
That’s why early organization matters. And it’s why you shouldn’t rely on quick online summaries when your claim may depend on the timing, documentation, and credibility of the evidence.


