Drunk-driving cases here can look different depending on where the crash happened and who was on the road. Some common patterns include:
- Nighttime commuting and “last-mile” driving: People leaving nearby entertainment areas or late-shift jobs may be on familiar roads when impairment causes lane drift, delayed braking, or failure to yield.
- High-speed interchanges and sudden stop events: When a driver is impaired, reaction time drops—rear-end collisions and chain reactions can follow.
- Pedestrians and nearby crosswalks: Even when the impaired driver is the main fault, the injuries can be severe when pedestrians are struck after poor visibility or late detection.
- Weather and visibility factors: New York winters and sudden storms can intensify how an impaired driver performs—and how the defense tries to blame the conditions instead.
These details matter because they shape liability, causation, and what evidence needs to be collected early.


