Distracted Driving Accidents in Fort Lauderdale: Proving Fault
Why distracted driving cases are harder to prove than they look
Nearly everyone suspects the other driver was on their phone — and often they were. But “I think they were texting” doesn’t prove distracted driving. Building a distracted driving case in Fort Lauderdale requires specific evidence: phone records, dashcam footage, surveillance, witness accounts, or the driver’s own admissions. Without that evidence, the claim rises or falls on the standard negligence analysis — and comparative fault arguments from the insurer often reduce recovery. A Fort Lauderdale car accident attorney approaches distracted driving suspicion as a factual question that has to be proven, not just asserted.
This article walks through what Florida law actually requires, why distracted driving is so consequential in injury claims, and what evidence types can establish it.
Featured snippet — 5 ways to prove distracted driving
- Phone records showing calls, texts, or app activity at the time of the crash.
- Dashcam or surveillance footage capturing the driver’s behavior before impact.
- Witness accounts from other drivers or passengers who observed distraction.
- The driver’s own statements to police, witnesses, or on social media.
- Vehicle infotainment, telematics, and EDR data showing driver input patterns.
What Florida law says about distracted driving
Under Florida’s texting-while-driving statute, drivers are prohibited from using handheld wireless communication devices to manually type into or read certain communications while driving. The statute targets active texting and similar device use; it doesn’t criminalize every form of distraction. Separately, Florida also restricts handheld device use in school and work zones.
For your civil injury claim, though, the question isn’t just whether the other driver committed a traffic violation — it’s whether the driver breached the general duty of care to operate the vehicle safely. Distraction that isn’t covered by the texting statute (eating, grooming, adjusting infotainment, dealing with kids, conversations, drowsiness) can still support negligence.
Why distracted driving causes serious crashes
The NHTSA distracted driving resources highlight distracted driving as a significant contributor to U.S. motor vehicle crashes. The mechanism is simple: distraction means the driver isn’t tracking the road. At 55 mph, looking away for 5 seconds covers the length of a football field. That’s why distracted driving crashes often happen at higher speeds with less evasive action — a hallmark pattern that shows up in injury severity.
Distracted drivers also tend to misjudge following distance, react late to traffic changes, drift between lanes, and miss signs and signals. Each of those failures can be argued as negligence once the underlying distraction is proven.
Evidence type 1: Phone records
Phone records are often the single most powerful evidence of distracted driving. Mobile carrier records can show calls, texts, and data usage down to the minute — and sometimes the second. If the records show the driver was actively using their phone at the moment of the crash, the case moves from suspicion to documented negligence.
Obtaining phone records usually requires formal legal process — a subpoena or litigation discovery request. Informal requests to the driver are usually ignored. That’s why distracted driving cases often benefit from counsel filing suit sooner rather than later, because the subpoena power only becomes available after filing.
Evidence type 2: Dashcam and surveillance
Dashcam footage — from your own vehicle, other drivers nearby, or surveillance from businesses along the route — can sometimes directly capture a distracted driver. Visible behaviors that support distraction:
- Head down, eyes off the road.
- Hand near or on a phone.
- Drifting between lanes without apparent cause.
- Late braking response to traffic slowing ahead.
- Swerving without traffic justification.
Preservation matters. Business surveillance overwrites in 14 to 30 days, sometimes less. Waiting a month is usually too long.
Evidence type 3: Witness testimony
Witnesses in nearby vehicles often notice distracted driving — someone weaving, driving erratically, or visibly on their phone. Collecting witness contact information at the scene is critical because witnesses scatter within minutes and are usually impossible to track down later. A witness who says at the scene “the other driver was on their phone” is far more valuable than a witness contacted two months later who “thinks maybe” they saw something.
Evidence type 4: The driver’s own statements
Drivers often admit distraction at the scene — to police, to other drivers, or in moments of shock. Common admissions:
- “I looked down for just a second.”
- “I was checking my phone.”
- “I was distracted.”
- “I didn’t see you.”
These statements — if documented in the police report, recorded by a bystander, or overheard by witnesses — become evidence. Social media posts and text messages exchanged shortly before or after the crash can also be discoverable and damaging for the distracted driver.
Evidence type 5: Vehicle infotainment and telematics
Modern vehicles capture more driver input data than most people realize. Infotainment systems log touch-screen interactions. Telematics from insurance programs (UBI/black-box programs) and manufacturer connected-car services can show acceleration, braking, and steering patterns in the seconds before a crash. Event Data Recorders capture vehicle dynamics at impact. Each of these sources has its own preservation and access challenges, but together they can reconstruct driver behavior in detail.
PIP still applies regardless of driver conduct
Your own Florida’s PIP statute benefits don’t depend on proving the other driver was distracted. PIP is no-fault — your insurer provides medical benefits regardless of who caused the crash, as long as initial services occur within 14 days. PIP generally pays 80% up to $10,000 (EMC) or $2,500 (no EMC). The distracted driving investigation primarily affects the liability claim against the other driver, not your PIP claim. For broader statewide context, see our Florida car accident lawyers resource.
Why phone-records deadlines matter
Distracted driving evidence has short practical deadlines. Florida’s two-year filing deadline under § 95.11, as amended by HB 837 effective March 24, 2023, sets the outer boundary for filing. But phone record retention varies by carrier and record type — some data is retained only for a matter of weeks. Surveillance overwrites even faster. Getting preservation letters out and, where warranted, filing suit to enable subpoena power is often time-critical in distracted driving cases.
When to retain counsel
Distracted driving suspicion is one of the strongest signals that counsel should be involved early. The evidence isn’t accessible without legal process, and every week that passes makes key records harder to obtain. Our Fort Lauderdale personal injury team handles distracted driving cases across Broward County.
Wolf & Pravato has recovered over $200 million for injury clients across Florida, with more than 75 years of combined experience. We work on a contingency basis — you pay nothing unless we win. To discuss your Fort Lauderdale distracted driving crash, call 844-643-7200 or request a free case evaluation.
FAQs
How do you prove distracted driving in Florida?
Through specific evidence: phone records, dashcam or surveillance footage, witness accounts, the driver’s own statements, and vehicle infotainment or telematics data. Suspicion alone isn’t proof; documentation is what moves the case.
Is texting while driving illegal in Florida?
Yes. Florida’s texting-while-driving statute prohibits using handheld devices to manually type into or read certain communications while driving. Separate rules restrict handheld device use in school and work zones. The statute is a traffic law; violations also support civil negligence claims.
Can I get the other driver’s phone records?
Usually only through formal legal process — a subpoena or litigation discovery request. Carriers won’t release records to informal requests. This is one reason distracted driving cases often benefit from early counsel and sometimes from filing suit sooner to enable subpoena power.
How long are phone records kept?
Retention varies by carrier and record type. Some data — call detail records — is retained longer, while text content and certain app activity may be retained only for weeks. Preservation letters sent early can sometimes extend retention; waiting usually results in data loss.
What if the distracted driver denies it?
Denial is common, but the evidence often contradicts it. Phone records, surveillance, witness accounts, and the driver’s own earlier statements (to police, bystanders, social media) can undercut after-the-fact denials. The case is built on documentation, not on the driver’s cooperation.
Does proving distracted driving change my claim value?
It can. Clear evidence of distraction strengthens fault on the other driver, weakens comparative fault arguments against you, and in some cases supports claims for punitive damages (though Florida has specific requirements for that). The strongest distracted driving cases produce meaningfully better outcomes than ambiguous-fault cases.
How long do I have to file a Fort Lauderdale distracted driving lawsuit?
Florida’s statute of limitations for most negligence actions is two years under § 95.11, as amended by HB 837 effective March 24, 2023. Claims that arose before the effective date may be governed by prior rules. Phone-record preservation deadlines are often much shorter.
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