Solon is a residential community with steady traffic flow for commuting and errands, and crashes often happen at the worst possible times—after work hours, during winter weather transitions, or when visibility is limited. In a DUI case, those conditions matter because they influence what officers observed, what witnesses remember, and how quickly evidence can be preserved.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Crashes near higher-speed commute routes where reaction time and lane positioning become key facts.
- Incidents during winter/early spring when snow, slush, or glare can affect braking distance and field observations.
- Multi-vehicle collisions where defense arguments may shift toward “someone else caused it,” even when impairment is suspected.
Your attorney’s job is to connect the impairment evidence to the collision mechanics—and to do it in a way that insurance companies can’t dismiss.


