Crazy Car Crashes In Phoenix

Cops deal with them every day.

Sometimes it seems impossible to drive the speed limit here in Phoenix and the highways of Arizona. If you drive the speed limit, you’re almost impeding other traffic. Anyone who’s driving in Phoenix knows traffic rarely flows at the speed limit.

And to be sure, we see plenty of speeding tickets that were issued under questionable circumstances. But, the cops writing these tickets often see a lot of crazy car crashes that are speed related. I think this colors their worldview.

The typical driver might get a ticket once in their life, or maybe a ticket every few years. In other words, getting a ticket is a rare event for most people. For the police though, they spend all day, every day, dealing with all sorts of insane stuff that the average driver rarely encounters. Police are routinely peeling bodies out of crashed cars and pulling crashed cars out of houses.

Below are several photographs I collected from Nextdoor.com of some accidents in North Phoenix over the period of a couple weeks. These sorts of accidents are common for police, even though they may seem unusual to the rest us.

 

Yep, that’s a car, in a backyard, upside down, on a house.

 

The daytime aftermath of the above car accident.

 

A car crashed in someone’s front yard.

 

A car crashed into the front of a house.

 

Another car crashed into the front of a house.

 

This driver managed to flip their car upside down all by themselves.

 

Another driver with an upside down car on a 25 mph residential street.

Latest Blog Posts

Traffic Accidents in Arizona

We frequently represent clients in traffic accident cases.  The two most common traffic accident statutes we see are A.R.S. § 28-701(A) and A.R.S. § 28-729.1.  A.R.S. § 28-701(A).  A.R.S. § 28-701(A) is the statute typically cited in civil speeding tickets, but it is also commonly used in accident tickets

Photo Enforcement – It’s All About The Benjamins

Photo Enforcement – It’s All About The Benjamins

f you believe that photo enforcement devices, also referred to as photo radar devices, are for safety, you would be mistaken.  Photo enforcement exists to generate revenue for the government and for private companies who are in bed with the government.  Here are some examples.