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New Data Shows Where Breaking Traffic Laws Is Most Likely to Turn Deadly — New Mexico Tops the List

A new analysis has revealed the U.S. states where ignoring traffic laws carries the greatest risk of fatal consequences — and New Mexico ranks as the most dangerous by a striking margin.

The study, conducted by the Simmrin Law Group, examined five years of crash data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and scored each state on three high-risk behaviours: distracted driving, speeding, and dangerous intersection crashes. Each category was assigned a weighted score for a total possible 100-point “traffic violation fatality score.”

The results show major geographic disparities — and highlight how certain types of risky behaviour are driving fatal crashes in different parts of the country.


New Mexico: The Most Dangerous State for Traffic Law Violators

New Mexico earned a troubling 87 out of 100, the highest fatality-risk score in the nation.

Here’s how the state performed across the three metrics:

  • Distracted driving crashes: 7.24 per 100,000 residents (30/30)
  • Speeding crashes: 6.70 per 100,000 (30/35)
  • Intersection fatalities: 3.96 per 100,000 (27/35)

The state’s perfect score in distracted-driving deaths — many tied to mobile phone use — played a major role in its overall ranking.


South Carolina and Louisiana Follow Behind

South Carolina ranked second with a score of 64/100, driven primarily by the nation’s highest speeding-death rate (7.85 per 100,000).

Louisiana, in third place with 56/100, showed elevated risks across all three categories, especially distracted driving.

A spokesperson for Simmrin Law Group said the findings reflect long-standing enforcement and behavioural challenges:

“States struggling with distracted phone use, chronic speeding, and reckless intersection behaviour are seeing the most fatal consequences. Where enforcement is weaker, crash severity increases. Prioritising stronger penalties, more visible policing, and tech-driven enforcement could dramatically reduce these deaths.”


The Rest of the Top 10 Most Dangerous States

4. Arizona — 55/100

  • Strongly impacted by intersection-related fatal crashes.

5. Wyoming — 53/100

  • One of the country’s highest speeding-fatality rates.

6. Missouri — 52/100

7. Montana — 51/100

8. Delaware — 47.2/100

9. Kansas — 47/100

10. Florida — 46/100

While these states differ demographically and geographically, each shows patterns of high-risk driving behaviour — particularly speeding and poor intersection compliance.


Why This Matters

Traffic fatality trends increasingly reflect behavioural patterns shaped by digital habits and driving culture:

  • Mobile-phone distraction is now a leading cause of severe crashes.
  • Speeding-related deaths have surged since 2020.
  • Intersection crashes are climbing in states where enforcement is inconsistent.

The study’s authors say stronger public awareness campaigns and tougher enforcement could reduce preventable deaths — especially in states topping the list.


Full Ranking (Top 10)

RankStateScore /100
1New Mexico87
2South Carolina64
3Louisiana56
4Arizona55
5Wyoming53
6Missouri52
7Montana51
8Delaware47.2
9Kansas47
10Florida46

Methodology

The analysis examined NHTSA crash data from 2019–2023, scoring each state across:

  • Distracted driving deaths (max 30 points)
  • Speeding-related deaths (max 35 points)
  • Intersection-related deaths (max 35 points)

Scores were totalled to produce a 100-point fatality-risk index.

What the Findings Reveal About America’s Changing Driving Habits

While the rankings spotlight the most dangerous states, the study also reflects broader national trends in how Americans drive — and where risk is rising fastest.

Over the past five years, NHTSA data shows:

  • Distracted driving fatalities have increased, with mobile-phone use remaining a primary factor.
  • Speeding-related deaths surged during and after the pandemic, as emptier roads encouraged faster driving and habits stuck even after traffic returned.
  • Intersection crashes are climbing, often tied to red-light running, rushed driving, and reduced enforcement presence in smaller cities and rural communities.

Experts say these behaviours are heavily influenced by lifestyle changes, social media habits, and the daily pressures placed on U.S. drivers.

A spokesperson for Simmrin Law Group adds:

“Drivers today face more digital distractions and more incentives to rush — longer commutes, denser cities, and a near-constant pressure to multitask. The states scoring highest on our index are the ones where these stresses collide with weaker enforcement.”

The group also noted that improvements in technology have not yet resulted in safer outcomes.
Even with more cars equipped with lane-assist systems, automatic braking, and collision warnings, fatal crash numbers remain stubbornly high. The issue, they argue, is behavioural rather than technological.


Why Some States Score Much Worse Than Others

According to the analysis, several recurring factors appear in the states with the highest fatality scores:

1. Rural road networks

States like New Mexico, Wyoming, and Montana have long, high-speed rural roads where crashes are more likely to be severe and emergency response times are slower.

2. Lower enforcement density

States with fewer traffic officers or limited funding for enforcement tend to see higher rates of speeding and distracted driving.

3. Driver culture

In several high-ranking states, speeding is seen as a norm rather than a violation, making enforcement more challenging.

4. Intersection design

Poorly lit or wide intersections — or those lacking automated enforcement — increase risks of red-light running and high-speed impacts.


What States Can Do to Reduce Fatal Violations

The study highlights several interventions that states could implement to reduce crash severity:

  • Increase penalties for handheld phone use while driving
  • Expand red-light and speed-camera programs
  • Improve road lighting and intersection design
  • Fund more visible, consistent traffic enforcement
  • Run digital campaigns targeting young drivers, who are disproportionately represented in distracted-driving fatalities

The researchers emphasize that even low-cost measures — such as public education campaigns or automated enforcement — can dramatically reduce crash rates.

The post New Data Shows Where Breaking Traffic Laws Is Most Likely to Turn Deadly — New Mexico Tops the List appeared first on Social Media Explorer.



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