Dover traffic isn’t “big city” traffic, but the same risk factors show up—especially when people drive after drinking and then merge, turn, or pass in tight timing windows.
You may be dealing with a scenario like:
- Evening driving into workday routes: A driver leaves a bar/house gathering, then heads toward main roads where turning lanes, stop lights, and merge points create high-consequence moments.
- Intersection and turning crashes: Impaired reaction time can show up as late braking, failure to yield, or a sudden drift into a turn path.
- Weather and road-condition surprises: In Ohio, rain, fog, and winter slick spots can worsen control problems. Defense teams may try to blame the weather—so your evidence needs to be stronger than “it was slick.”
- Pedestrian and property exposure: Even when the collision isn’t directly with a pedestrian, impacts can involve yards, fences, parked vehicles, or sidewalk-adjacent areas that increase damage and complicate liability.
A Dover injury claim often turns on what the record shows about driving behavior before impact—not just that alcohol was involved.


