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Every year approximately 250,000 people in California
get arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol
(DUI). The arrest is usually terrifying, bewildering,
humiliating and obnoxious. But it is just the beginning
of a dizzying series of procedures which will unfold
over the next two to six months, carrying with it an
astounding number of consequences and penalties. The
consequences of the arrest begin almost immediately.
At the time of the arrest, the police officer will take
your driver's license and give you a suspension notice
and a temporary license.
Their form will tell you that in thirty days your license
becomes suspended for four months. The most important
information, however, is either not on the form or is
virtually incomprehensible: you have ten days from the
date of the arrest to request a hearing at the DMV.
If you do so, you protect your rights. If you do not
request a hearing within the ten days, you give up substantial
rights. If you request a hearing and they can't give
you a hearing within the next thirty days (and they
can't), they are required to stay (postpone) the suspension
of your license. It does not start thirty days after
the arrest, and you can continue to drive with a valid
license until the DMV has a hearing and renders a decision.
This may sound like postponing the inevitable, but
it is not. Many people who have hearings win those hearings
and do not have a license suspension at all. More importantly,
by requesting the hearing and obtaining a stay, you
control the timing of the consequences from the DMV
and from the court, and it works in your favor. Remember,
these laws were not written with your interests in mind.
You and your lawyer are the only ones with your interests
in mind. If you have the DMV hearing and win, there
is no suspension from the DMV. If you have the hearing
and lose, then your license will be suspended sometime
thereafter for four months. You are not allowed to drive
at all for four months. If however, you are convicted
of a DUI and ordered into an alcohol program (see below),
then it is possible to convert the four month suspension
to a one month suspension followed by a five month license
restriction, allowing you to drive to and from work,
during the course of your employment, and to and from
the alcohol school. The timing of all of this is critical,
and a lawyer experienced in handling DUI matters can
arrange for the best possible timing. The prosecution
of the criminal case usually begins approximately thirty
days from the date of the arrest.
There are three major aspects in every DUI case: the
officer's observations of your driving (or whatever
called his attention to you), the officer's observation
of you after the detention, which includes the field
sobriety testing procedures, and the result of your
blood or breath test. Although there are so many DUIs
handled in each court every day that, to the prosecutor,
they tend to become routine, every case should be determined
by its own unique set of facts and circumstances. The
consequences that result from the prosecution can vary
tremendously, depending upon the facts of the case and
the skills of your lawyer. Because there are so many
DUIs, standardized treatment by the courts has developed.
For the garden-variety DUI, the law requires four minimum,
mandatory consequences:
1. Three years of informal or summary probation. This
is the easy kind of probation, without a probation officer
to report to. You are on probation to the court, and
it is a promise not to get arrested again for three
years.
2. A fine of approximately $1,250.00, and you will
have plenty of time to pay it.
3. A level one drinking-driver program. You must attend
ten weekly sessions of approximately three hours each.
4. A ninety day license restriction, allowing you to
drive to and from work, during the course of your employment,
and to and from the alcohol program mentioned above.
The timing of this restriction from the court and the
suspension/restriction from the DMV is critical, and
failure to time them properly can result in more suspension/restriction
than is necessary. The consequences discussed in the
paragraph above are what I refer to as the garden-variety,
standard minimum first-time consequences. There are
four situations that can increase those penalties:
1. An accident;
2. A blood alcohol concentration of .20% or greater;
3. A refusal to take a blood or breath test; and
4. A prior DUI or alcohol-related reckless driving conviction.
If any of these four circumstances exist, the penalties
for the standard minimum first offense go up, and can
include jail time, community service, additional fines,
or a host of other undesirable consequences. It all
sounds pretty dismal. There are always going to be some
consequences, even if you're not guilty of driving under
the influence of alcohol. But the consequences can vary
from minor to severe. A criminal lawyer with experience
handling DUI matters can make a major difference in
the outcome of most cases.
PRESENTED BY:
Steven Mandell has been a criminal lawyer in Santa Monica,
California for the last 27 years. Mr. Mandell has handled
over a thousand criminal cases, many of them involving
DUI alcohol or drugs. Mr. Mandell can be reached by
telephone at 310 393 0639. Email: SRM6100@aol.com
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