Drunk driving remains one of the most devastating and preventable causes of car accidents in Louisiana and across the nation. Despite decades of public awareness campaigns, strict DUI laws, and harsh criminal penalties, impaired drivers continue to kill and injure thousands of innocent people every year. When drunk drivers cause crashes, victims have the right to pursue substantial compensation—including punitive damages designed to punish this reckless behavior.
At Smiley Injury Law, our New Orleans car accident lawyers represent victims of drunk driving accidents throughout Louisiana. We understand the unique aspects of these cases, from gathering evidence of intoxication to pursuing punitive damages that hold drunk drivers fully accountable for the harm they cause.
Drunk driving killed 12,429 people in 2023—approximately 30% of all traffic fatalities—with one person dying in an alcohol-impaired crash every 42 minutes in the United States, while Louisiana consistently experiences higher drunk driving fatality rates than the national average with 36% of the state’s fatal crashes in 2024 involving impaired drivers. Alcohol impairs judgment, reduces reaction time, diminishes coordination, and affects vision—all essential driving skills that become dangerously compromised even at blood alcohol concentrations below the legal limit.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reports that drunk driving crashes are entirely preventable. Every person killed by a drunk driver represents a tragedy that should never have happened. Victims and their families deserve justice and full compensation for the devastating consequences of this reckless behavior.
Understanding the scope of drunk driving helps illustrate why these accidents warrant aggressive legal action and maximum compensation for victims.
According to NHTSA data:
Over the 10-year period from 2014-2023, approximately 11,000 people died every year in drunk driving crashes—meaning over 110,000 preventable deaths in a single decade.
Louisiana consistently experiences higher rates of drunk driving fatalities than the national average:
According to data from LSU’s Center for Analytics and Research in Transportation Safety, Orleans Parish reported among the highest numbers of fatal crashes in Louisiana, with alcohol playing a significant role in many of these tragedies.
NHTSA data reveals patterns in drunk driving behavior:
Alcohol affects multiple functions essential for safe driving, with impairment beginning at blood alcohol concentrations well below the legal limit.
Effects of Alcohol on Driving
The NHTSA explains how alcohol impairs driving:
Louisiana maintains strict laws against drunk driving, and violations of these laws establish clear negligence in civil claims.
Blood Alcohol Concentration Limits
Louisiana law establishes the following BAC limits:
Criminal Penalties
Louisiana imposes escalating penalties for DUI convictions:
When drunk drivers cause injury or death, they face additional charges including vehicular homicide.
Civil claims for drunk driving accidents are separate from criminal prosecutions. You can pursue compensation regardless of whether criminal charges are filed or result in conviction. Civil cases require only proving negligence by a “preponderance of the evidence” (more likely than not), while criminal cases require proof “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
This means you may recover compensation even when criminal charges are dismissed or the driver is acquitted.
Victims of drunk driving accidents can pursue substantial compensation, including damages that may not be available in typical car accident cases.
Economic Damages
Non-Economic Damages
Louisiana law allows punitive damages when defendants act with “wanton or reckless disregard” for the safety of others. Drunk driving often meets this standard because drivers consciously choose to drink and drive despite knowing the extreme dangers.
Punitive damages serve two purposes:
These additional damages can significantly increase total compensation in drunk driving cases.
Building a strong case against a drunk driver requires gathering comprehensive evidence of intoxication and establishing how the impairment caused your accident.
Evidence of Intoxication
Beyond proving intoxication, you must establish that the drunk driving caused your injuries. Evidence includes:
Louisiana follows pure comparative fault under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2323. Even if you bear some responsibility for an accident, you can still recover damages reduced by your percentage of fault.
However, in drunk driving cases, the intoxicated driver typically bears the vast majority of fault. Their decision to drive while impaired demonstrates such clear negligence that comparative fault defenses rarely succeed significantly.
Insurance companies may still attempt to shift blame to victims. Our car accident attorneys aggressively protect clients from unfair fault allocation in drunk driving cases.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 3492, you have one year from the accident date to file a personal injury lawsuit. This is one of the shortest deadlines in the nation.
For wrongful death claims, the one-year period typically runs from the date of death, which may differ from the accident date if the victim survived for a period before succumbing to injuries.
Missing these deadlines means losing your right to compensation forever. Contact an attorney immediately after a drunk driving accident to protect your legal rights.
If you’ve been injured or lost a loved one to a drunk driver in New Orleans or anywhere in Louisiana, Smiley Injury Law will fight to hold the negligent driver fully accountable. Our experienced car accident attorneys pursue maximum compensation including punitive damages for drunk driving victims.
Contact Smiley Injury Law today for a free, confidential consultation:
📞 (504) 822-2222
📍 201 St Charles Ave, Ste 2500, New Orleans, LA 70170
We work on a contingency fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win your case.
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