Brandon DUI with Injury Attorney
A DUI charge becomes something else entirely when someone gets hurt. The moment a collision produces injuries, Florida law shifts the exposure from a traffic offense into felony territory, and the investigation that follows is nothing like a standard drunk driving stop. If you were involved in an accident in Brandon or the surrounding Hillsborough County area where alcohol or drugs are alleged to have played a role, the criminal case building against you is moving fast. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm has defended clients across the Tampa Bay area against Brandon DUI with injury charges and understands exactly what the prosecution is assembling and where it can be challenged.
What Makes DUI with Injury a Felony in Florida
Florida law elevates a DUI to a felony when the impaired driver causes, or is alleged to have caused, serious bodily injury to another person. Serious bodily injury means injury involving a substantial risk of death, significant permanent disfigurement, or prolonged loss or impairment of a bodily organ or function. That threshold gets argued in court more than most people realize.
A third-degree felony DUI with serious bodily injury carries up to five years in prison and up to five years of probation, along with a fine of up to five thousand dollars. If the injuries are catastrophic, or if the victim dies, the charges escalate further into DUI manslaughter, which is a second-degree felony. At that level, the mandatory minimum sentences are severe and the collateral consequences touch every part of a person’s life.
There is also the civil exposure. The injured party can file a separate lawsuit, and often does. The criminal case and the civil case run on parallel tracks, and what happens in one can influence the other. This is why representation that handles only the criminal piece without any awareness of the civil picture is incomplete.
How These Cases Are Built by the State, and Where They Break Down
When an injury accident occurs on a road in Brandon, the response typically involves Hillsborough County Sheriff’s deputies, and in some areas Florida Highway Patrol. Both agencies have protocols for accident reconstruction and DUI investigation. By the time the dust settles, the prosecution’s file may include blood draw results from a hospital, field sobriety test footage, witness statements gathered at the scene, accident reconstruction reports, and emergency room records.
Blood draws taken at a hospital after an accident are a common point of legal dispute. The timing of the draw matters, the chain of custody matters, and whether law enforcement obtained proper consent or a warrant matters. Florida courts have addressed these issues directly. If officers obtained the blood draw without a proper warrant and without valid consent, the results may be suppressed. Without a BAC reading, the prosecution’s case can collapse entirely.
Accident reconstruction is another area where the defense can do real work. Reconstruction experts employed by the state make assumptions. Those assumptions can be challenged by independent experts who analyze the same physical evidence and reach different conclusions. Road conditions on SR-60, US-301, or the Crosstown near Brandon at the time of the incident, visibility issues, the actions of other drivers, and vehicle defects are all variables that factor into who caused the crash and how.
There is also the causation question that runs beneath the surface of every DUI injury case. The state must prove not just that the defendant was impaired, but that the impairment caused the accident and the resulting injuries. These are separate elements. A person can test above the legal limit and still not be the proximate cause of a collision if another driver ran a red light or a tire failed. Prosecutors sometimes treat causation as automatic. It is not.
License Consequences Specific to Felony DUI in Florida
Florida’s administrative license suspension process runs independently of the criminal court proceeding. After an arrest for DUI, including one involving injuries, the driver has a short window to request a formal review hearing with the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles. Missing that deadline typically means an automatic suspension takes effect.
A felony DUI conviction triggers a longer mandatory revocation than a standard first-offense DUI. Depending on the circumstances and prior record, the court may impose a revocation of three years, and in some situations the revocation is permanent. A hardship license is sometimes available, but eligibility depends on the specific conviction and the driver’s history.
For commercial drivers, the consequences are harsher. A single DUI conviction disqualifies a CDL holder from operating a commercial vehicle for at least one year, and a second conviction results in permanent disqualification. Many Brandon residents work in logistics, trucking, or other commercial driving fields, and the license issue carries real economic weight that the criminal defense strategy must account for.
Questions Clients Ask About DUI Injury Cases in Brandon
Can I be charged even if I wasn’t over .08?
Yes. Florida law allows a DUI conviction based on impairment to the point that normal faculties are affected, regardless of the BAC reading. Prescription medications, marijuana, and other substances can form the basis of a charge even without an alcohol reading above the legal limit.
The injured person is saying they are fine now. Does that help my case?
It can matter in terms of how the prosecution characterizes the severity of the injury and whether the serious bodily injury threshold is met. It may also influence plea negotiations. However, the criminal charge proceeds based on the state of the injuries at the time of the incident, not later recovery. The prosecution does not drop charges simply because the victim has healed.
I gave a blood sample at the hospital. Was that voluntary?
Not necessarily, and that is exactly the kind of question that needs a legal answer specific to your situation. Hospital blood draws taken by medical staff for treatment purposes are different from draws compelled by law enforcement. The circumstances under which officers accessed those results may provide grounds to challenge their admissibility.
What happens if the other driver was also at fault?
Comparative fault matters more in the civil case than in the criminal case, but even in the criminal proceeding, causation must be proven. If evidence shows the other driver contributed to the accident, that can affect whether the state can prove your impairment caused the injuries. An independent reconstruction of the crash is often essential in these situations.
Will I go to prison if convicted?
A third-degree felony conviction for DUI with serious bodily injury can result in a prison sentence, but sentencing depends on the specific facts, criminal history, the severity of the injuries, and how the case is resolved. Many felony DUI cases are resolved through negotiated dispositions that avoid the maximum exposure. That requires building the strongest possible defense first, which creates leverage in negotiations.
Can this charge be reduced to a misdemeanor?
In some circumstances, yes. Negotiated resolutions can result in reduced charges, particularly where the evidence has weaknesses or where the severity of the injury does not clearly meet the felony threshold. There is no guarantee, but the viability of a reduction depends heavily on the facts and on the quality of the legal challenge mounted early in the case.
How long will this process take?
Felony DUI cases in Hillsborough County typically move more slowly than misdemeanor matters because the evidence is more complex and the stakes for both sides are higher. Cases can take several months to over a year to resolve, depending on whether the matter goes to trial, the court’s docket, and how the defense investigation unfolds.
Defending a Brandon DUI Injury Case Requires Immediate Action
Omar Abdelghany handles all client matters personally at OA Law Firm. There are no associates assigned to your case, no assistants managing your communications. When you retain the firm, you deal directly with the attorney handling your defense. He returns calls and emails promptly, provides regular case updates, and makes sure clients understand both the charges and the strategy being employed to fight them.
The evidence in a DUI injury case starts aging the moment the accident occurs. Surveillance footage from businesses along SR-60 or Causeway Boulevard disappears after days or weeks. Witnesses’ memories change. Physical evidence at the scene gets cleared away. The defense investigation needs to begin as early as possible to preserve what exists and to identify the gaps in the prosecution’s version of events.
Omar is licensed to practice in all Florida courts, including state courts in Hillsborough County where Brandon DUI with injury cases are prosecuted. His practice is dedicated exclusively to criminal defense, which means every judgment call in your case is made by someone who spends all of their professional time in this area of law. Contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation about your Brandon DUI injury case.
