If a drunk driver injured you in Olympia, you have the right to pursue a personal injury case against them regardless of whether criminal charges are ever filed. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. has a long track record over decades, fighting for those hurt by a drunk driver in Olympia, Thurston County, and throughout Washington state. We take cases on a contingency fee basis, so you pay nothing unless we recover compensation on your behalf. Call us at (253) 383-4500 for a free, no obligation consultation.
Drunk driving accident cases in Olympia can extend liability beyond the at-fault driver, draw in multiple insurance policies, and run alongside a separate criminal case at the same time.
As you decide which law firm to choose, make sure they have the following:
Choosing the right car accident attorney after a drunk driving crash in Olympia is a decision that affects every aspect of your recovery. Schedule a free consultation with Freeman Law Firm, Inc. and let us answer all your questions and help you in your decision.
Every personal injury case in Washington rests on four elements:
A good drunk driving accident attorney knows a DUI violation resolves two of the four elements automatically, and builds the rest of the case from there.
The first two elements, duty and breach, are settled by the DUI violation itself. Every driver owes a duty of reasonable care to others on the road, and Washington law treats a DUI violation under RCW 46.61.502 as automatic proof of breach, a concept attorneys call "negligence per se."
The remaining two elements, causation and damages, are what you establish through the personal injury case. Causation means the crash directly caused your specific injuries, and damages covers the measurable losses those injuries produced: medical expenses, lost income, or lasting physical harm. Breath and blood test results are admissible in your injury case under RCW 46.61.506, and officer observations from the police report carry in alongside them.
Criminal charges against a drunk driver address punishment: jail time, fines, and license revocation. Compensation for your injuries comes from a separate personal injury case on its own timeline.
A criminal conviction is not required to win your personal injury case. When a conviction does occur, it creates an official finding that the driver was intoxicated, which can support your case. If the criminal case is dismissed or the driver is acquitted, your case continues on its own evidence. Personal injury cases carry a lower burden of proof than criminal cases: instead of "beyond a reasonable doubt," your case asks whether it is more probable than not that the driver caused your injuries.
Liability in an Olympia drunk driving accident does not always stop with the driver. Depending on where the driver was drinking before the crash, a commercial establishment may share responsibility for what happened.
A drunk driver who causes a crash carries liability for your injuries, property damage, lost income, and all other losses that follow from the collision. Washington follows a pure comparative negligence standard: your compensation is reduced proportionally if you contributed to the crash, but the drunk driver's share of liability is calculated based on their own conduct, independent of any fault attributed to you.
Washington prohibits commercial establishments from serving alcohol to a visibly intoxicated person under RCW 66.44.200. If the driver who hit you was drinking at a bar or restaurant before the crash and staff continued serving them despite visible signs of intoxication, that establishment can share liability alongside the driver.
Dram shop cases require a different investigation than the crash itself. Attorneys need to request point-of-sale records and surveillance footage from the establishment, review staff training and alcohol server certification records, and in certain situations request documents from the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board. At Freeman Law Firm, Inc., the dram shop investigation begins at the start of representation, before standard business retention schedules overwrite camera systems or purge transaction records.
Washington personal injury law allows injured people to recover both economic and non-economic damages. Drunk driving crashes frequently produce serious, high-cost injuries — traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, broken bones, and internal injuries requiring surgery and extended rehabilitation — and both damage categories need to be fully developed before any settlement figure is agreed to.
Economic damages cover losses that can be documented and calculated:
Non-economic damages cover losses that cannot be assigned a direct dollar amount but are no less significant in how they affect your life:
Washington does not allow punitive damages in drunk driving accident cases. Criminal penalties handle punishment for the driver. Your personal injury case is limited to compensating you for documented economic and non-economic losses. Spencer Freeman and Kim Shomer account for every category of loss, present and future, before any settlement figure is put on the table.
Washington requires drivers to carry a minimum of $25,000 per person in liability coverage. In a serious drunk driving crash, hospital bills alone can approach or exceed that amount within days, and the at-fault driver's policy may leave a large portion of your actual losses unaddressed.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. reviews every available source of recovery at the outset of representation:
If a carrier unreasonably disputes or denies coverage, Washington's Insurance Fair Conduct Act provides additional remedies.
Insurance adjusters representing the at-fault driver's carrier, and in certain cases your own carrier, may attempt to settle for less than a complete accounting of your losses. An attorney who has calculated every category of economic and non-economic damages, including future medical costs and lost earning capacity, can present a complete figure before any settlement agreement is signed.
If a drunk driver killed a family member, Washington's wrongful death statute under RCW 4.20.010 provides a path for specified family members. Spouses and domestic partners typically have standing to pursue a wrongful death case, as do children, and in certain situations parents do as well.
Recoverable losses will usually include funeral expenses, the value of the deceased's future financial contributions to the family, and the loss of the relationship with the person who was killed. A wrongful death action is initiated by the personal representative of the deceased's estate, with compensation distributed to the statutory beneficiaries.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. has represented families in wrongful death cases arising from drunk driving crashes and can advise on who qualifies under Washington's statute, what compensation is available, and how the wrongful death case intersects with any ongoing criminal proceedings.
Washington's statute of limitations for personal injury and wrongful death cases is three years from the crash date under RCW 4.16.080, and for people who were under 18 at the time of the crash, the period does not begin until they turn 18. Three years is the deadline to initiate the case, and resolution typically takes considerably longer. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. can confirm the applicable deadline and any factors in your specific situation that may affect it.
Documentation gathered at the scene and in the days following a crash is what attorneys use to establish liability and the full scope of losses. A breakdown of the steps that carry the most weight in building your personal injury case:
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. has built its Olympia practice on fierce advocacy and compassionate counsel and has a long track record The Olympia office is located at 400 Union Ave SE, Suite 200, and every resolved case ends with a donation of 1% of attorney fees to a charity of the client's choosing through the Giving Back Program.
For a free consultation with an Olympia drunk driving accident attorney, call (360) 338-6886.
