Practice Area

Drunk-Driving Accidents

Hero Answer

Arizona drunk driving injury claims

A DUI prosecution is separate from a civil injury claim. The civil claim focuses on compensation for losses caused by the crash and may use police, toxicology, and witness evidence.

  • Request or preserve police reports, citations, and witness information.
  • Civil deadlines still apply even while a criminal case is pending.
  • Dram shop issues may exist in limited circumstances under Arizona law.

Drunk Driving Accident Lawyers in Scottsdale, AZ Helping Victims and Their Families Recover

Driving under the influence puts everyone at risk and often causes devastating harm. We pursue available compensation and, when appropriate, punitive damages to seek accountability.

When a drunk driver’s reckless actions lead to devastating accidents, the consequences can change lives forever. Lazzara Law Firm in Scottsdale, AZ, stands ready to provide compassionate and effective legal representation for victims of drunk driving accidents. Our experienced team of attorneys works tirelessly to ensure that justice is served and that you receive the compensation you deserve.

Drunk driving accident injury claim

Everyone deserves the comprehensive legal representation a skilled DUI accident lawyer can provide in the aftermath of a horrific crash. Lazzara Law Firm has extensive experience dealing with car accident claims, including drunk driving accidents. If a drunk driver’s negligence has harmed you or a loved one, call our law firm at (480) 456-3080 to schedule your free consultation to discuss your legal rights.

Drunk-driving accident evidence beyond the first police report

A drunk-driving crash can produce both a criminal investigation and a civil injury claim. Those processes are related but not the same. The injury claim still needs proof of fault, medical causation, insurance coverage, damages, and long-term impact. Preserving the crash record and the medical timeline helps keep the civil claim moving even while criminal issues are pending.

Police reports, arrest records, citation information, field observations, witness statements, body-camera references, and toxicology-related information may become important. Not every document is immediately available, and the injured person should keep the report number, agency name, officer contact information, and any court or case details received after the crash.

Scene evidence remains valuable even when impairment seems obvious. Photograph vehicle positions, damage, debris, traffic signals, lanes, skid marks, bars or event venues nearby, rideshare pickup areas, lighting, and road conditions. Witnesses may remember erratic driving, speeding, weaving, sudden braking, or statements by the impaired driver before police arrived.

Medical records should be complete and chronological. Drunk-driving impacts can cause serious orthopedic, head, spine, internal, or psychological injuries. Keep emergency records, ambulance records, imaging, surgery recommendations, therapy notes, prescriptions, mental-health referrals, and provider restrictions. Consistent follow-up helps show the difference between a frightening event and a documented injury claim.

Insurance coverage should be reviewed carefully. The impaired driver may have minimum coverage, disputed coverage, or limited assets. There may also be underinsured motorist coverage, medical payments coverage, a vehicle owner issue, a rideshare or employer connection, or another contributing party depending on the facts. Keep all policy letters and do not assume one adjuster has the complete picture.

Loss documentation should include pain, medical bills, missed work, transportation, replacement services, family disruption, anxiety while driving, and future-care concerns. If the crash changed sleep, concentration, confidence, or the ability to drive, those effects should be documented through provider notes and practical daily-life records.

Arizona law has deadlines that can affect civil claims regardless of what happens in a criminal case. Waiting for every criminal proceeding to end may risk civil evidence. Early legal review can identify which records to request, which insurers to notify, and whether additional investigation is needed.

Records that help clarify the claim

  • Police report number, agency name, citation information, and court-related notices.
  • Scene photos, vehicle damage, witness names, and nearby camera locations.
  • Emergency, imaging, specialist, therapy, and psychological-care records.
  • Insurance letters for the impaired driver and any available personal coverage.
  • Lost wage records, out-of-pocket expenses, and transportation costs.
  • Notes about anxiety, sleep, pain, driving limits, and family disruption.

Lazzara Law Firm can help coordinate the civil claim evidence while monitoring how the impairment-related facts may affect liability, coverage, and settlement evaluation.

Insurance review after impairment-related crashes

A drunk-driving crash can feel straightforward on fault, but coverage still needs careful review. If the impaired driver had limited limits, no valid policy, a borrowed vehicle, or a work-related connection, other coverage may become important. Keep declarations pages, policy letters, and correspondence from your own carrier as well as the other driver’s insurer.

The injury narrative should stay separate from anger about the impaired conduct. Document treatment, missed work, pain, anxiety, transportation problems, and family disruption with the same care used in any serious injury claim. That record helps the civil claim remain organized even when criminal updates are emotional or delayed.

Coverage and recovery records to keep together

Keep a separate folder for impairment-related documents and a separate folder for injury-loss documents. The impairment folder can hold police, citation, court, and victim-notification records. The injury-loss folder should hold treatment, wage loss, transportation, counseling, and insurance materials. Separating the two helps the civil claim stay organized while still preserving the facts that show why the crash occurred.

Civil claim details after an impaired-driver crash

The criminal case may confirm important facts, but the civil injury claim still needs its own proof. The injured person should not wait to document medical treatment, wage loss, vehicle damage, out-of-pocket costs, and daily-life changes. Criminal proceedings can take time, while medical bills and insurance deadlines continue moving.

Impairment evidence may include officer observations, citations, test information, witness statements, and court notices. Keep copies of every document received from police, prosecutors, insurers, or victim-notification systems. If the impaired driver was leaving a work event, bar, party, rideshare route, or company function, write down those facts for legal review.

Coverage can be a major issue when the impaired driver has limited insurance. Preserve your own policy information, including medical payments and uninsured or underinsured motorist references. A complete coverage review can help identify options beyond the at-fault driver’s first insurance response.

Your Recovery Deserves a Real Legal Strategy.

No Pressure * No Fees 
Connect with the firm that knows your worth

Call For Free Consultation

Arizona Injury Claim FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file a civil claim after a drunk driving accident in Arizona?

Yes. A criminal DUI case is handled by the state, while an injury claim is a separate civil matter seeking compensation for losses caused by the crash.

Can punitive damages apply in an Arizona drunk driving accident case?

Punitive damages may be available in some cases involving reckless or aggravated conduct, but they depend on the facts and evidence. They are not automatic in every drunk driving crash.

Can a bar or restaurant be liable for a drunk driving crash?

Arizona dram shop claims may be available in limited circumstances under A.R.S. § 4-311, such as when alcohol was served to an obviously intoxicated person who later caused a crash.

How long do I have to file a drunk driving accident lawsuit?

The general Arizona deadline for personal injury lawsuits is two years under A.R.S. § 12-542. Acting earlier helps preserve police reports, witness statements, video, and toxicology evidence.