Drunk Driving Accident Victim in Tulsa: Your Rights and Next Steps
In Oklahoma, if you were injured by a drunk driver, you may be entitled to both compensatory and punitive damages, as courts frequently award additional punitive damages in DUI cases. Oklahoma law treats drunk driving as negligence per se when the driver's BAC is 0.08% or higher (47 O.S. § 11-902), meaning liability is essentially automatic. On top of compensatory damages for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering, Oklahoma allows punitive damages when a defendant acts with reckless disregard for others' rights (23 O.S. § 9.1). You have 2 years from the date of injury to file your claim (12 O.S. § 95). Oklahoma's modified comparative fault rule (23 O.S. § 13) only bars your recovery if you are 51% or more at fault — a threshold almost never reached when the other driver was intoxicated. Tulsa sees a high concentration of DUI crashes in Brookside, the Blue Dome District downtown, and along I-44 and US-75 during late-night hours on weekends. Here is what you need to know and do.
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Key Takeaways
- Oklahoma allows punitive damages against drunk drivers (23 O.S. § 9.1) — these are awarded on top of compensatory damages for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
- Driving with a BAC of 0.08% or higher is negligence per se in Oklahoma (47 O.S. § 11-902), which means the drunk driver's liability is established as a matter of law.
- Oklahoma's statute of limitations is 2 years from the date of injury (12 O.S. § 95) — do not wait for the criminal case to conclude before pursuing your civil claim.
- Bars and restaurants that over-serve may be liable under Oklahoma's dram shop act (37A O.S. § 6-105), and social hosts who serve minors can also face liability.
- Oklahoma's modified comparative fault rule (23 O.S. § 13) only bars recovery if you are 51% or more at fault — rare in drunk driving victim cases.
- Punitive damages in Oklahoma are generally capped at the greater of $100,000 or the amount of actual damages, but the cap does not apply to intentional conduct.
Call 911 and report suspected impairment
Call 911 immediately. If you suspect the other driver is impaired — slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, the smell of alcohol, erratic behavior, or open containers in the vehicle — tell the 911 dispatcher specifically. Tulsa Police Department will conduct a DUI investigation at the scene, including standardized field sobriety tests and a breathalyzer or blood draw under Oklahoma's implied consent law (47 O.S. § 751).
Stay in your vehicle on the highway. If you are on a surface street and can safely move, get to a protected location away from traffic. Do not approach or confront an impaired driver — they may be unpredictable. Let law enforcement handle the investigation.
When officers arrive, provide a thorough account of the crash and your observations of the other driver's behavior. DUI crashes in Tulsa peak between 10 PM and 3 AM, especially on weekends near the Brookside entertainment district along Peoria Avenue, the Blue Dome District downtown, and along the I-44 and US-75/US-169 interchange. The officer's DUI investigation, field sobriety test results, and BAC reading will all be documented in the crash report and DUI arrest report — both critical for your civil claim.
Document the scene and evidence of impairment
Photograph everything you can safely capture — vehicle damage, road conditions, the overall scene layout, traffic signals, and any visible evidence of impairment. Open containers, beer cans, liquor bottles, or drug paraphernalia in or around the other driver's vehicle are powerful evidence. Photograph them from a safe distance.
Get the names and phone numbers of any witnesses. Ask if they saw the other driver's behavior before the crash — swerving across lanes, running red lights, driving the wrong way, or showing signs of intoxication. Witness testimony about the driver's condition strengthens both the criminal prosecution and your civil claim for compensatory and punitive damages.
If you have a dashcam, preserve the footage immediately. Video showing the drunk driver weaving, failing to stop, or driving erratically before impact is compelling evidence in both the criminal case and your civil lawsuit. Back it up to a separate device or cloud storage before it gets overwritten.
Get immediate medical treatment
DUI crashes produce some of the most severe injuries on the road because impaired drivers typically fail to brake, swerve, or take any evasive action before impact. The collision happens at full speed. This means DUI crash victims frequently suffer traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, multiple fractures, internal organ damage, and severe whiplash or soft tissue injuries.
Accept ambulance transport to the hospital. Saint Francis Hospital is Tulsa's Level I trauma center and handles the most critical injuries — multi-system trauma, severe TBI, spinal cord injuries, and complex surgical cases. Hillcrest Medical Center and Ascension St. John Medical Center also handle serious emergency cases. Tell the medical team you were hit by a suspected drunk driver and describe every symptom, even ones that seem minor.
Follow through on every treatment recommendation without gaps. Your medical records are the foundation of your damages claim. In a drunk driving case where punitive damages are at stake, thorough documentation of injury severity and ongoing treatment directly affects the size of the award. Keep records of every appointment, prescription, therapy session, and out-of-pocket expense. For rehabilitation, Hillcrest Specialty Hospital provides ongoing care for serious injury recovery.
Your civil case is separate from the criminal DUI case
The criminal DUI case (State of Oklahoma v. the drunk driver) and your civil injury case (you v. the drunk driver) are entirely separate proceedings. The criminal case is prosecuted by the Tulsa County District Attorney. Your civil case is a personal lawsuit you file for damages. They have different timelines, different rules of evidence, and different standards of proof.
A DUI conviction is powerful evidence in your civil case — it essentially confirms negligence. But even if the drunk driver is not convicted (charges reduced, plea to a lesser offense, or acquittal), you can still win your civil claim. The civil standard is preponderance of the evidence (more likely than not), far lower than the criminal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt. BAC test results, police observations, crash reconstruction, and witness statements can all establish impairment in the civil case regardless of the criminal outcome.
Contact the Tulsa County DA's Victim-Witness Coordinator to stay informed about the criminal case proceedings. Restitution orders from the criminal case, victim impact statements, and the criminal record itself all support your civil claim.
Punitive damages in Oklahoma drunk driving cases
Oklahoma law allows punitive damages — also called exemplary damages — when a defendant acts with reckless disregard for the rights of others (23 O.S. § 9.1). Choosing to drive while intoxicated is a textbook example of reckless disregard, and Oklahoma courts have consistently upheld punitive damage awards in DUI crash cases.
You must prove entitlement to punitive damages by clear and convincing evidence, a higher standard than the preponderance standard for compensatory damages. In a DUI case, this standard is typically met through the BAC test results, the arrest record, officer observations, and the circumstances of the crash. A BAC of 0.08% or higher establishes negligence per se under Oklahoma law (47 O.S. § 11-902), and a BAC well above the limit strengthens the punitive damage argument considerably.
Oklahoma caps punitive damages at the greater of $100,000 or the amount of actual compensatory damages awarded (23 O.S. § 9.1). However, this cap does not apply when the defendant's conduct constitutes intentional misconduct — and repeat DUI offenders or drivers with extremely high BAC levels may face arguments that their conduct was effectively intentional. The cap also does not apply if the court finds the defendant acted intentionally and with malice toward others.
Dram shop liability — can you sue the bar or restaurant?
Oklahoma has a dram shop act (37A O.S. § 6-105, formerly 37 O.S. § 537) that allows victims to sue bars, restaurants, and other alcohol licensees that served alcohol to a person who was visibly intoxicated. If the drunk driver who hit you was over-served at a Tulsa establishment, that business may share liability for your injuries.
Dram shop claims add a defendant with commercial liability insurance, which can significantly increase your total recovery. Evidence for these claims includes surveillance footage from the establishment, credit card or tab receipts showing the volume of alcohol served, bartender and server testimony, and witness statements about the drunk driver's visible intoxication before leaving.
In Tulsa, the Brookside area along Peoria Avenue, the Blue Dome District, Cherry Street, and the Riverwalk area all have concentrations of bars and restaurants. If the drunk driver came from a specific establishment, act quickly — surveillance footage is typically overwritten within days or weeks. An attorney can send a spoliation or preservation letter to the establishment immediately to prevent destruction of evidence.
Insurance claims and Oklahoma's minimum coverage
Oklahoma requires all drivers to carry minimum liability insurance of $25,000 per person, $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 for property damage (47 O.S. § 7-204). These minimums are often inadequate for serious DUI crash injuries — a single surgery or ICU stay can exceed $25,000.
If the drunk driver's policy limits are insufficient, your own underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage fills the gap. Oklahoma requires insurers to offer UIM coverage, and if you carry it, you can claim up to your policy limits for the difference. Uninsured motorist (UM) coverage applies if the drunk driver had no insurance at all. Review your own auto policy for these coverages.
Punitive damages are typically not covered by the drunk driver's liability insurance — they are paid from the defendant's personal assets. If a dram shop claim is viable, the establishment's commercial general liability or liquor liability policy provides an additional source of recovery that may have much higher limits than the driver's auto policy.
Get a free claim check for your drunk driving victim case
Hit by a drunk driver in Tulsa? Take our free Injury Claim Check at /check. Answer four quick questions about your accident, injuries, and the circumstances of the crash, and you will receive a personalized report covering your filing deadline, Oklahoma legal rules, compensatory and punitive damage potential, and your next steps — plus the option to connect with a Tulsa attorney who handles DUI victim cases.
Being hit by a drunk driver is one of the most frustrating injuries because it was entirely preventable. Someone chose to drive impaired, and you are dealing with the consequences — pain, medical bills, missed work, and stress. Oklahoma law gives you strong tools to hold that person accountable, including punitive damages. Do not let the drunk driver's insurance company minimize what happened to you. Start with the free claim check. It takes 60 seconds and costs nothing.