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DUI with Serious Injury or Vehicular Homicide in Georgia: Enhanced Penalties and Defenses

13 de mayo de 2026·4 min de lectura·J. Lee & Associates
DUI with Serious Injury or Vehicular Homicide in Georgia: Enhanced Penalties and Defenses
Nota: Nota: Este artículo es solo para fines informativos y no constituye asesoría legal. Cada caso es diferente. Consulte con un abogado para obtener consejo sobre su situación específica.

DUI with Serious Injury or Vehicular Homicide in Georgia: Enhanced Penalties and Defenses

A standard DUI charge in Georgia is already serious, but when an impaired driving incident results in serious bodily injury or death, the consequences escalate dramatically. Under Georgia law, prosecutors can pursue felony charges that carry years or even decades in prison. If you or a loved one is facing charges for DUI with serious injury or vehicular homicide, understanding the law and building a strong defense is critical.

DUI Causing Serious Injury: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-394

Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-394, any person who causes a serious injury to another person while operating a vehicle in violation of Georgia's DUI statute (O.C.G.A. § 40-6-391) commits a felony. "Serious injury" is defined as an injury that involves a substantial risk of death, loss or impairment of a bodily member or organ, or significant disfigurement. This is distinct from minor injuries that might result in lesser charges or civil liability alone.

A conviction under this statute carries a mandatory minimum sentence of one (1) year and up to fifteen (15) years in prison. The court may also impose fines of up to $5,000, community service requirements, mandatory substance abuse treatment, and a driver's license suspension of up to three years. Because this is a felony conviction, it permanently appears on a criminal record and cannot be restricted or expunged under current Georgia law.

First Degree Vehicular Homicide: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-393(a)

When a DUI incident results in death, the charge becomes first degree vehicular homicide under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-393(a). This is a felony carrying a prison sentence of three (3) to fifteen (15) years for each death caused. If multiple fatalities occur in a single accident, sentences can be imposed consecutively, meaning a defendant could face decades of imprisonment. Georgia courts have consistently upheld consecutive sentencing in multi-fatality vehicular homicide cases.

Second Degree Vehicular Homicide: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-393(b)

Second degree vehicular homicide applies when a death results from a traffic violation other than DUI, such as reckless driving, texting while driving, or running a red light. This is a misdemeanor offense punishable by up to twelve (12) months in jail and a fine of up to $1,000. However, prosecutors often file both first and second degree charges to give juries alternative options, especially in cases where the DUI evidence is contested.

Feticide by Vehicle: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-393.1

Georgia law also addresses situations where a DUI crash causes the death of an unborn child. Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-393.1, feticide by vehicle in the first degree is a felony carrying three to fifteen years in prison. This charge can be filed in addition to vehicular homicide charges if both a born person and an unborn child are killed.

Aggravating Factors That Increase Penalties

Several factors can lead to harsher sentencing in DUI injury and death cases:

  • Prior DUI convictions: A history of DUI offenses demonstrates a pattern of behavior that judges weigh heavily at sentencing.
  • Extreme BAC levels: Blood alcohol concentrations significantly above the 0.08 legal limit suggest greater recklessness.
  • Hit and run: Leaving the scene after causing injury or death (O.C.G.A. § 40-6-270) adds separate felony charges.
  • Driving on a suspended license: Operating a vehicle while already suspended for a prior DUI compounds the offense.
  • Multiple victims: Each injured person or fatality can result in a separate charge and consecutive sentence.

Defense Strategies in Serious DUI Cases

Despite the severity of these charges, multiple defense avenues exist:

  • Challenging the traffic stop: If law enforcement lacked reasonable articulable suspicion to initiate the stop, all evidence gathered afterward may be suppressed under the Fourth Amendment and the Georgia Constitution, Article I, Section I, Paragraph XIII.
  • Questioning blood and breath test accuracy: Georgia's implied consent law (O.C.G.A. § 40-5-55) requires specific procedures for chemical testing. Failure to follow proper protocols, maintain calibration records, or preserve chain of custody can render test results inadmissible.
  • Disputing causation: The prosecution must prove that the defendant's impairment was the proximate cause of the injury or death. If another driver's negligence, a mechanical failure, or a road defect contributed to the accident, causation becomes a contested issue.
  • Independent toxicology review: Defendants have the right to independent testing under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-392(a)(3). An independent toxicologist can challenge the state's BAC findings.
  • Accident reconstruction: Expert witnesses can analyze physical evidence, vehicle damage patterns, and environmental conditions to challenge the prosecution's narrative of how the accident occurred.

The Importance of Early Legal Representation

Time is critical in DUI injury and vehicular homicide cases. Evidence such as surveillance footage, witness memories, and vehicle data recorders ("black boxes") can be lost if not preserved quickly. An experienced criminal defense attorney can file motions to preserve evidence, challenge the state's case at preliminary hearings, and negotiate with prosecutors before formal indictment. In Georgia, grand jury indictment is required for felony charges, meaning there is an opportunity to present favorable evidence before charges are formally filed.

At J. Lee & Associates Law Group in Norcross, Georgia, we understand the gravity of these charges and the impact they have on your life, your family, and your future. Our attorneys have experience defending clients against DUI with serious injury and vehicular homicide charges throughout Gwinnett County and the greater Atlanta metro area. We investigate every detail, challenge every assumption, and fight to protect your rights at every stage of the process.

Free Consultation

If you are facing DUI with serious injury or vehicular homicide charges in Georgia, do not wait. Contact J. Lee & Associates Law Group at (770) 609-9396 for a free, confidential consultation. Se habla español. We are ready to defend your rights and your future.

Jerome D. Lee, Esq.
Revisado por
Jerome D. Lee, Esq.
Socio Administrador · Abogado en Georgia · Más de 30 años de experiencia

Jerome D. Lee es el abogado fundador de J. Lee & Associates Law Group, representando clientes en lesiones personales, inmigración, defensa criminal y derecho familiar en todo Metro Atlanta.

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