Serious Vehicular Crimes | Penal Law 125.13
New York Vehicular Manslaughter in the First Degree Lawyer
Vehicular manslaughter in the first degree carries heightened felony exposure and may involve aggravating facts such as serious intoxication allegations, prior history, multiple victims, or other charged circumstances. The defense requires a coordinated review of crash reconstruction, toxicology, causation, and mitigation.
Lebedin Kofman LLP represents clients in New York vehicular assault, vehicular manslaughter, aggravated vehicular homicide, DWI with accident, leaving-scene, reckless-driving, and serious felony vehicle cases.
Call 646-663-4430 or contact the firm for a confidential consultation.
Issues that may matter
- aggravating facts
- multiple-victim or prior-history allegations
- toxicology
- causation
- crash reconstruction
- medical examiner proof
- vehicle event data
- grand jury and trial preparation
Defense approach
Serious vehicular cases need immediate investigation because crash-scene evidence, video, vehicle data, phone data, roadway evidence, and witness memories can disappear quickly. Defense work may include accident reconstruction, toxicology review, medical-record review, vehicle inspection, search and seizure analysis, and close review of whether the alleged impairment or driving conduct actually caused the injury or death.
Where the case involves DWI or drug allegations, the defense may also address breath or blood testing, refusal issues, field sobriety testing, police observations, body-camera footage, and DMV consequences. Where death or serious injury is alleged, medical causation and expert review may become central.
Related pages
- Vehicular Crimes
- Vehicular Assault
- Vehicular Manslaughter
- Aggravated Vehicular Homicide
- DWI With Accident
- Reckless Driving
- Leaving Scene Serious Physical Injury
- Homicide Defense
- Criminal Defense
- Contact Lebedin Kofman LLP
Frequently asked questions
What should I do after a serious vehicular crime arrest or investigation?
Speak with defense counsel immediately and avoid statements about drinking, drugs, speed, phone use, sleep, the crash, or fault. Vehicle data, video, toxicology, road evidence, and witness information may need to be preserved quickly.
Can causation be challenged in a vehicular assault or manslaughter case?
Yes. Causation, crash mechanics, medical proof, toxicology, road conditions, other drivers, pedestrian conduct, and vehicle evidence can all be important defense issues.
Contact Lebedin Kofman LLP
If you are under investigation or charged in a serious vehicle-related case, call 646-663-4430 or contact Lebedin Kofman LLP.
New York Penal Law 125.13 Elements and Defense Issues
Vehicular Manslaughter in the First Degree is a more serious fatal-crash felony involving vehicular manslaughter plus an aggravating circumstance. Prosecutors generally must prove the required statutory elements beyond a reasonable doubt, and the defense should test each element instead of treating the charge as only a traffic or accident case.
What Prosecutors Must Prove
- proof of vehicular manslaughter in the second degree or the applicable statutory theory
- the death of another person
- an aggravating circumstance such as .18 BAC, qualifying prior history, multiple deaths, death of a child passenger, or another charged theory
- causation connecting operation, intoxication or impairment, and the death
Example of How This Charge May Be Alleged
For example, prosecutors may allege a fatal crash, intoxication, and a high BAC or prior DWI-related history. The defense may challenge the chemical-test evidence, causation, prior-history proof, indictment theory, reconstruction assumptions, and mitigation narrative.
Sentencing, Consequences, and Strategy
Vehicular felony cases can involve prison exposure, probation or parole issues, license consequences, immigration concerns, civil litigation exposure, employment consequences, professional licensing problems, and long-term reputational harm. Sentencing and plea posture depend on the exact charge, prior record, injuries or death alleged, mitigation, expert submissions, and the court.
Defense Work That Can Matter Early
Important early steps may include preserving crash-scene evidence, obtaining video, reviewing chemical-test records, challenging statements or searches, consulting reconstruction and toxicology experts, examining medical causation, preparing for grand jury or indictment issues, and developing mitigation before the case hardens.