DWI Driver Arrested on Northern State Parkway at Exit 28N

DWI Driver Arrested on Northern State Parkway at Exit 28N. May 15, 2026.

Updated May 15, 2026
MAJOR INCIDENT
1 vehicle
Road
Northern State Parkway
Reported
Updated
Source
Nysp
📌Approximate area — along Northern State Parkway Open in Google Maps →

Map showing incident location at 40.7800, -73.4000 Incident location, Long Island

What Happened

A driver was arrested on DWI charges Friday on the Northern State Parkway eastbound at Exit 28N leading to Willis Avenue eastbound, according to incident reports. The arrest involved a single vehicle, though specific details about the circumstances leading to the traffic stop have not been released.

The incident occurred on Friday, May 15, 2026, on the Northern State Parkway in the eastbound direction near the Exit 28N interchange. The exact time of the arrest and the identity of the driver have not been disclosed in available reports.

It remains unclear whether the DWI arrest followed a traffic accident, erratic driving complaint, or routine traffic enforcement. The severity classification suggests significant circumstances may have been involved, but details about any potential injuries, property damage, or additional charges have not been confirmed.

The involvement of a single vehicle indicates this was likely an enforcement action rather than a multi-car collision, though the specific events that led to the driver being pulled over and subsequently arrested are not yet available.

Location & Road Context

Exit 28N on the Northern State Parkway provides access to Willis Avenue in the Roslyn area of Nassau County. This section of the Northern State Parkway serves as a major east-west corridor connecting communities across Long Island.

The Northern State Parkway has recorded 129 incidents in our database, with recent activity including roadwork projects and various traffic incidents. This location has seen previous DWI arrests along the parkway corridor in recent weeks.

The investigation details and specific charges filed against the driver have not been released. DWI arrests in New York typically involve field sobriety testing and chemical testing to determine blood alcohol content, though the results of any such testing in this case have not been disclosed.

Information about arraignment proceedings, bail status, or the driver’s court date has not been made available. The case will likely proceed through Nassau County’s court system, though specific legal proceedings remain pending disclosure by authorities.

Broader Impact

This arrest continues a pattern of DWI enforcement along the Northern State Parkway, with multiple impaired driving incidents recorded on this corridor in recent months. The Exit 28N area’s proximity to local communities makes enforcement in this zone particularly significant for regional traffic safety.

Topics

Northern State ParkwayDWI crashLong Island accident todayLong Island traffic todayLong IslandNY

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if I'm in a car accident Northern State Parkway?

Call 911 immediately if anyone is injured or if the vehicles can't be moved safely off the roadway. Stay at the scene — leaving the scene of an accident with injuries is a crime under New York Vehicle and Traffic Law §600. Exchange license, registration, and insurance information with every other driver involved. Take photographs of every vehicle, the position of the vehicles before they're moved, all license plates, the road surface, traffic signs, and any visible injuries. Get the names and phone numbers of every witness — police often won't capture bystander witnesses on their own. Seek medical attention within 24 hours even if you feel fine; soft-tissue injuries and concussions can take a day or two to present, and a delayed medical visit weakens an injury claim. In Nassau County, NCPD responds outside of incorporated villages. In Suffolk County, SCPD covers the five western towns; East End towns have their own forces. New York State Police Troop L responds to accidents on state highways across both counties.

How long do I have to file a no-fault claim in New York?

Thirty days. New York Insurance Law §5102 requires you to file a Personal Injury Protection (PIP/no-fault) application with the insurer of the vehicle you were in (or, if you were a pedestrian or cyclist, with the insurer of the striking vehicle) within 30 days of the accident. Missing the 30-day deadline can void your no-fault benefits — that's up to $50,000 in medical bills and 80% of lost wages (capped at $2,000/month) per injured person. The form is the NF-2 application; your insurance carrier provides it on request. New York no-fault is a true PIP system: it pays regardless of who caused the crash.

What counts as a "serious injury" under New York law?

Under Insurance Law §5102(d), a "serious injury" is one that meets at least one of these categories: (1) death; (2) dismemberment; (3) significant disfigurement; (4) a fracture; (5) loss of a fetus; (6) permanent loss of use of a body organ, member, function, or system; (7) permanent consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member; (8) significant limitation of use of a body function or system; or (9) a medically determined injury that prevents the injured person from performing substantially all daily activities for at least 90 of the first 180 days following the accident. Only injuries that meet one of these nine categories create the right to sue the at-fault driver for pain and suffering damages — short of that threshold, recovery is limited to no-fault PIP benefits. Disputes over whether an injury meets the threshold are the single most-litigated issue in NY motor-vehicle cases.

How long do I have to sue after a Long Island car accident?

Three years from the date of the accident for personal injury claims under CPLR §214(5). Wrongful death claims have a two-year deadline under EPTL §5-4.1. If a government entity is involved (a county vehicle, a road defect on a state highway, a defective traffic signal, a county bus), you must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days under General Municipal Law §50-e — that's a non-negotiable jurisdictional deadline, and missing it usually bars the claim entirely. Property-damage-only claims have the same three-year clock. The clock starts on the day of the accident, not the day you discover the full extent of an injury.

Can I still recover compensation if I was partly at fault?

Yes. New York is a pure comparative negligence state under CPLR §1411. Even if you were 90% at fault, you can still recover 10% of your damages. (A pending 2026 budget proposal would change this to a 51% bar — meaning a plaintiff who is more than 50% at fault would recover nothing — but that hasn't passed.) Insurance carriers routinely try to inflate the injured driver's percentage of fault to reduce payouts. The percentage assignment is decided by the jury at trial (or negotiated during settlement); it isn't fixed by the police accident report and isn't binding even when the report assigns fault. Reporting practice and the actual legal apportionment are separate questions.

How do I get a copy of the police accident report?

If local police responded to the scene, the report is filed under an MV-104A form. In New York State, you can request a copy through the DMV at https://dmv.ny.gov/vehicle-safety/get-copy-accident-report (roughly $7 online, $10 by mail) once the responding agency has uploaded it to the state system, which usually takes 5-10 business days. NCPD and SCPD also have their own direct-request processes through the precinct that responded. If you weren't injured but the property damage exceeded $1,000, New York VTL §605 requires you (the driver) to file your own MV-104 report with the DMV within 10 days regardless of whether police responded.

How dangerous is Northern State Parkway ?

Long Island Traffic tracks every reported incident on this road across both counties — see the road profile page for the multi-year accident count, severity distribution, and the specific intersections that show repeated incident clusters. Suffolk and Nassau county roads with chronic problems are reviewed by their respective DOTs on a multi-year cadence; persistent issues are sometimes addressed with new signal phasing, lane-narrowing treatments, or — in extreme cases — a Vision Zero engineering response. Daily incident updates flow into our live-events feed every fifteen minutes.

Disclaimer: Incident information on this page is compiled from public sources including police reports, traffic agencies, and news outlets. It is provided for informational purposes only and may not reflect the most current status of this incident. Do not rely on this information for legal, insurance, or emergency decisions. For emergencies, call 911.