DWI, Hit-and-Run, and Leaving-the-Scene Guides
DWI crash and leaving-the-scene cases can involve overlapping criminal, DMV, insurance, injury, causation, chemical-test, and VTL section 600 issues. These resources connect the core DWI and vehicular-crimes pages to practical guides people search when a stop, crash, or alleged failure to remain at the scene becomes urgent.
New York Vehicular Crimes: What to Know First
What are vehicular crimes in New York?
Vehicular crimes can involve DWI or DWAI allegations, crashes, serious injury, death, leaving-the-scene accusations, reckless driving, causation disputes, and felony exposure under New York criminal and traffic laws.
What evidence matters after a serious vehicle crash?
Important evidence can include crash-scene photos, body-camera video, 911 calls, witness statements, vehicle data, medical records, chemical-test timing, accident reconstruction, road conditions, and police reports.
What should someone do after a vehicular-crime accusation?
Do not discuss fault, intoxication, speed, or crash details without counsel. Preserve court papers, DMV notices, insurance communications, photos, medical records, and vehicle information for attorney review.
This page is general information, not legal advice. Vehicular-crime defense depends on the charge, crash facts, causation proof, testing record, and court posture.
Serious Vehicular Crime Defense Topics
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