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Summary of the 101 Ways
Excerpted from the book, 101
Ways to Avoid a Drunk Driving Conviction by William C. Head,
Esq. and Reese I. Joye, Jr., Esq. The book is available
for $19.95 + shipping/handling and applicable tax. Call
404-250-1113 for orders. You can also order online.
ORDER NOW FROM AMAZON.COM!
Chapter I
1. Avoid any type of vehicle
if you have become impaired by overindulging, because any
means of transportation can lead to a DUI conviction.
2. Don't assume that you can't be arrested for DUI on private
property, because you can be charged with DUI in most states,
regardless of your location.
3. Even a car being towed can
lead to a DUI conviction if the person sitting behind the
wheel is intoxicated, so avoid even getting in the front
seat of a car if you are intoxicated.
4. If sleeping inside a car
after you have been drinking, do so in the back seat, with
the ignition off and the keys in your pocket, with the car
off the highway.
5. Breath machines are subject
to error when you have been recently exposed to volatile
fumes, such as lacquer, paint, gasoline, or dry cleaning
fluids. Always get a second, independent test.
6. Existing "illegal per
se" laws in 45 states and D.C. allow the police to
make a case against you regardless of any evidence of impairment;
therefore, either keep your alcohol consumption to moderate
levels, or don't drive at all after having more than a few
drinks.
7. Where faced with a traditional
DUI charge, and the indicated level of alcohol allows the
state to have a presumption of intoxication in its favor,
the defendant must introduce evidence of non-intoxication
to rebut the presumption, or face virtual certain conviction.
8. If the trial judge incorrectly
instructs the jurors about presumptions (making it irrebuttable
or mandatory), such instruction constitutes reversible error.
9. With blood tests, if the
personnel drawing the blood for the state's test do not
follow the required rules and regulations, the test results
can be totally excluded from the evidence.
10. In administering any of
the state's tests, if the person operating the machine is
not qualified or certified in accordance with state law,
the test is invalid. Requiring strict proof of the testing
officer's certification can often lead to a dismissal or
a favorable "plea bargain", where some flaw or
defect in the proof of current certification is called into
question.
11. By proving that the defendant
was not "in actual physical control" of the vehicle,
the case can be won, since one of the elements of the alleged
crime is missing.
12. With blood tests, the use
of an alcohol-laden swab on subject's skin contaminates
the puncture site and voids the test by the state.
13. Where state law requires
it, failure of the police to advise the defendant of his
right to a second, independent test as required by state
law voids the state's test.
14. In an "illegal per
se" DUI case, proof (by use of retrograde extrapolation
techniques) that the defendant was not above the state threshold
level because he was still in the absorption stage at the
time of the arrest, eliminates one of the elements of the
per se DUI. A similar tactic can help where you are facing
a "presumption" of intoxication threshold.
15. The police lacked probable
cause to make the "stop", so all tests and evidence
gathered as part of the illegal arrest must be thrown out
of court.
16. The use of medical or other
expert testimony can prove that the defendant's physiological
system is "unusual" so that the state's test results
can be excluded or at least adjusted to an amount below
the state's threshold for the "presumption" of
intoxication.
17. Where the state's testing
machine is subject to error of +/-0.01% this margin of error
can be used to show that the required threshold (which is
an element of the state's case) is missing.
18. Where good reason exists
to refuse the state's test, such refusal generally will
prevent the state from using a numerical BAC reading against
you, thereby greatly reducing the chances of a conviction
for DUI. However, an administrative suspension of driving
privileges will be the consequence, in most states. In some
states, such as New Jersey and Alaska, potential penalties
for refusal are as bad as the penalties for DUI.
19. The failure of the arresting
officer to follow through in giving the required implied
consent warnings will cause the state's BAC test results
to be excluded from trial.
20. If the arresting officer
misstates the required wording of the implied consent warnings,
the state's BAC test results will be excluded from trial,
or the entire case may be dismissed.
21. In some states, if the
prosecutor mentions the defendant's failure to submit to
the state's test, such introduction of evidence is improper
in a jury trial.
22. Most states do not permit
forcible retrieval of a blood sample from a suspected DUI
driver unless death or serious injury to another person
has resulted from a DUI-related accident. Therefore, results
obtained in such cases will be void
Chapter II
23. Use a designated driver
for your group in order to eliminate the possibility of
the least drunk driver trying to take everyone home.
24. Change the brand or type of alcoholic beverage to lessen
the quantity of alcohol being consumed. For example, use
a "low alcohol" brand beer versus regular beer,
or alternate with a "non-alcoholic" beer every
other hour.
25. Use public transportation
to take you and your group to and from your destination,
thereby allowing everyone to imbibe.
26. Put together a "kit"
of items to assist you to avoid incriminating yourself and
in order to be prepared in the event you are stopped by
the police.
27. Use the "Driver's
Rights" cards located in Appendix K (or similar cards
provided by your attorney) which "speak for you"
in asserting your rights in the event of a confrontation
with police.
28. Before going out for the
evening, always prepare your vehicle by removing any and
all incriminating items and any valuables.
29. Eat heartily before starting
to drink and include high carbohydrate foods to help absorb
alcohol that you will be drinking later that night.
30. Avoid driving after drinking
if you have a fever or an elevated "body core"
temperature.
31. If you are taking any type
of non-prescription medication, avoid driving at all after
drinking due to the possibility of the medication containing
alcohol which would be added to the alcohol that you will
be drinking.
32. Don't drink at all (much
less drive after drinking) if you are taking prescribed
medications since the possibility of synergism or some other
adverse effect from combining alcohol and drugs could kill
you or cause the death of someone else.
Chapter III
33. Be aware that a person's
body water determines how readily your body will absorb
alcohol, and that lean, young men are best able to tolerate
alcohol while old, fat women are the least able to tolerate
alcohol.
34. Women should be especially cautious about what type
of alcohol and what quantity they consume since studies
have shown that men's stomachs produce more of a special
enzyme which metabolizes alcohol than is found in women's
stomachs.
35. If you plan a night of
drinking, start by having up to 32 ounces of water before
any alcohol consumption, and alternate a glass of water
between each alcoholic drink to help slow the rate of consumption.
36. Studies have shown that
carbonation in highball mixers, sparkling wines, and draft
beer tends to accelerate the rate of absorption of alcohol
into your bloodstream, causing you to get more drunk than
you would by using non-carbonated (or less-carbonated) alternatives.
37. Use non-carbonated fruit
juices or other mixers with wine to dilute the alcohol content
of your beverage, and thereby extend the time in which you
can safely continue consuming wine.
38. Stop all alcohol consumption
1 1/2 hours before starting home and drink water during
this time period to improve your chances for a favorable
urine test if you are stopped later that night.
39. Use a hand-held breath
alcohol testing device to see what your alcohol content
is before leaving for home.
40. Give yourself some FSTs
to see what level of impairment you may have, and avoid
driving at all if you have difficulties performing the tests.
Chapter IV
41. Make sure that you and
all your passengers are wearing seat belts, and that no
distractions in your car (such as rowdy passengers, the
radio or a tape player) would cause you to not concentrate
on driving.
42. Use turn signals whenever required, and do not use your
high beam lights at all on the entire trip home.
43. Be aware that traffic offenses
such as speeding, running a red light, and not making a
complete stop at a stop sign are the leading causes for
the police to stop vehicles that subsequently result in
DUI convictions.
44. In bad weather, due to
more than a ten times greater chance of an accident, don't
drive after consuming any alcohol at all since you can be
convicted of a DUI even where the level of alcohol was less
than the per se limit or the traditional DUI threshold when
an accident is involved.
45. "Blend in" with
traffic because studies have shown that it is significantly
more difficult for police to detect an impaired driver than
when your car is isolated on the highway.
46. Don't be a good Samaritan
on the way home because acts of kindness or civic-mindedness
can bring you into contact with police, resulting in a DUI
conviction.
47. Don't ever try to elude
an officer because such an attempt constitutes a serious
offense and may even result in a tragic accident, or possibly
lead to a murder charge.
48. If you are pulled over
by the police, don't exit your car unless instructed to
do so by the police officer, because you may incriminate
yourself by conduct which indicates intoxication (being
unsteady on your feet).
Chapter V
49. If you are stopped for
a traffic violation, don't argue with the police officer.
Simply give the officer your documents, and don't talk except
to respond in the most basic fashion. Your pocket recorder
will tape the transaction for later use.
50. If you receive a ticket for a moving violation, and
not a DUI citation, don't press your luck by continuing
to drive. The police may well be looking for you down the
road. Go to a motel and check in, or call someone to come
get you.
51. If you are stopped at a
roadblock, have your license and other documents in hand
and offer these to the officer. Your pocket recorder will
capture the conversation. Never admit to having consumed
alcohol. Don't perform FSTs, and (in most states) don't
blow into a PBT without first speaking to an attorney, unless
the officer advises you that your license will be revoked
for refusing to do so. Card No. 1 of Appendix K covers what
needs to be told the officer about your willingness to cooperate
on tests at the scene of the "stop".
52. If you are involved in
an accident after having had something to drink, don't talk
to anyone at the scene about it. Don't take any FSTs. If
anyone was injured or killed, refuse all tests unless your
attorney advises you to submit.
53. Regardless of the cause
for the "stop" NEVER admit prior alcohol consumption.
Don't blurt out anything to the officer in an attempt to
explain the circumstances, or it will be used against you
later in court.
54 If an officer insists that
you must perform FSTs or blow into a PBT, only do so IF
the officer advises you that your license will be revoked
for failure to comply. Due to the fact that this is NOT
TRUE in most states, ask the officer to write in his field
notes that you are agreeing to do these tests under protest.
55. When you are required to
submit to the official state test for BAC, ALWAYS insist
on your own independent BAC tests. Some states require you
to obtain your tests on your own initiative, and will tell
you nothing about your rights to seek another test. Other
states will advise you of this right, and will even transport
you to a facility for giving a sample, if you are going
to be kept in custody.
56. If the police deprive you
of your freedom of movement and then elicit answers to incriminating
questions from you without first giving your Miranda warnings,
your attorney may be able to suppress any admissions made
by you while in custody.
57. A commonly-used FST, the
horizontal gaze nystagmus test has a multitude of other
possible medical causes other than intoxication, and your
attorney can present these to the jury to discount the officer's
statement that you failed this test due to intoxication
(assuming that you haven't simply refused to perform all
FSTs).
58. Before taking the official
state-administered BAC tests, ask if state law permits you
to speak with an attorney. Many states permit a limited
right for you to do so, and you should always exercise this
right. Card No. 2 of Appendix K covers this situation, and
asserts your rights for you.
59. Try to record the conversations
between you and the police officers because the officer's
missing or defective warnings can cause test results to
be excluded from evidence. Without the tape, the jury will
believe the officer's testimony over yours.
60. If requested to take the
"officials state BAC tests, your delaying tactics or
insistence on speaking with an attorney (if you have been
told that no right to counsel exists in that state) can
constitute a refusal, causing an implied consent license
revocation.
61. By asking the officer whether
you can make telephone calls to an attorney or family member
prior to submitting the official BAC tests, you may be taking
advantage of legally-permissible delays that will make your
BAC tests more favorable.
Chapter VI
62. In states which require
the police to administer multiple BAC tests, the failure
of the police to perform any of the additional tests required
by law will be grounds to exclude all test evidence from
the trial. However, the cause of the non-completion of tests
can not be your refusal or willful non-compliance with the
officer's request for a sample.
63. If the police fail to fully advise you of what types
of independent tests you may take pursuant to state statutes
and regulations, this will cause the state's test results
to be excluded from evidence.
64. Proving that the defendant
partition ratio is not "normal" such that the
pre-set breath testing machine standards are inaccurate
can provide the necessary evidence to convince the jury
that the BAC results are not worthy of belief.
65. Proving that the defendant's
hematocrit is outside the normal range and significantly
"variant" to cause an adjustment in the indicated
BAC reading may drop the defendant's BAC level below the
per se standard (or the "presumed" intoxicated
threshold) set by law.
66. Attacking the breath testing
machine's accuracy based upon its record of failure during
certification tests may cast sufficient doubt upon reliability
of the machine to either cause the judge to exclude the
test results or convince the jury not to believe the state's
BAC reading.
67. If you are to be tested
on the official state BAC equipment, be certain that you
inform the officers about any physical problems or environmental
interferers which may have a bearing on your test results.
The state's test may be later excluded if it is non-specific
for detection of alcohol.
68. Bridgework or false teeth
may "trap" mouth alcohol and contaminate a breath
machine sample. The failure of police to cause dentures
to be removed before a test can be grounds for dismissal
of charges, or at least grounds for excluding the state's
breath test results.
69. If a police officer fails
to continuously observe a defendant for the required waiting
period under state law, this can be the ground for excluding
the state's BAC results.
70. Vomiting or burping delays
the start of the breath test due to the contamination of
your mouth by alcohol brought up from the stomach. The failure
of the officer to restart the observation period will be
grounds to exclude the state's BAC results.
71. Where the prosecution uses
a witness to try to establish that you had a higher BAC
at the time of driving (by using retrograde extrapolation
techniques), such testimony should be attacked based on
the witness' lack of knowledge about your rate of elimination,
timing of the drinking period, strength of the alcoholic
beverage, and other variables which will affect the Widmark
curve.
72. Always get the names, addresses
and telephone numbers of potentially beneficial witnesses
regarding your appearance of sobriety at the police station,
or during the time your were receiving your independent
tests. These witnesses may help your attorney build your
defense.
73. Whenever submitting to
the state's BAC tests, always ask the test operator to preserve
a sample of the breath, urine or blood so that the sample
can be independently tested later.
74. Where a single breath test
is utilized by the state, your attorney may be able to assert
due process and equal protection arguments that may convince
an appeals court that the state's use of one test is constitutionally
infirm, particularly where no sample is preserved after
your request for same.
75. For blood tests, most states
only permit highly-trained medical personnel to collect
blood samples. Challenging the person's qualifications or
certification can result in the BAC test results being excluded.
76. The state must prove that
the laboratory or hospital which analyzed your blood sample
used properly trained personnel to collect the sample. Sometimes,
winning on this point is as simple as filing a motion to
dismiss or a motion for directed verdict as a result of
the prosecutor failing to introduce the proper evidence
of the technician's training, which will cause the person's
testimony to be totally excluded.
77. When obtaining your independent
tests, be certain that the laboratory analyzes whole blood
and not plasma. Whenever plasma is tested, the results can
be as much as 20% higher than when whole blood is utilized.
78. Always ask for "split"
samples on blood tests so that an unaltered portion can
be later tested to determine unusual hematocrit or other
atypical conditions of your blood.
Chapter VII
79. If you have not yet been
permitted to call an attorney, ask for permission to do
so after you are booked. Every state allows attorney contact
at this stage.
80. Don't talk with fellow detainees or police personnel
about your arrest for DUI. Only speak with your attorney
unless he advises you to discuss matters with other persons.
81. At the police station,
stay seated and be certain that you maintain a composed
demeanor at all times. You may be "on camera"
with the police department's video tape machine.
82. In many states, the police
officers must provide you with certain copies of the arrest,
testing or booking documentation. Remember what you were
given and keep up with all such documents.
83. If the police ask your
permission to videotape you, don't agree to this, since
this likely means that you look drunk, and they want to
tape you so it can be used against you later.
84. If video equipment is available
to the police and it is NOT being used on you, ask your
attorney whether you should request the police to videotape
you if equipment is available. In the alternative, ask your
attorney if he has video equipment which can be brought
to the police station so that you can be taped.
85. When you go to have your
independent test(s) done, get a urine test and a blood test,
if your state law allows you to have more than one test
made. If you have been consuming vast quantities of water,
as suggested in this book, your urine test may be highly
favorable, when compared to a blood or breath test.
86. Be certain that you can
establish a "clean" chain of custody for your
independent test samples in the event these are required
to be transported for analysis.
87. Call upon a friend or relative
to assist you in arranging for bail so that you can get
out of jail promptly. Furthermore, this witness may be used
later to testify that you did not appear to be intoxicated
when they saw you that evening.
88. Your observations concerning
facts and witnesses may be critical to winning the case,
particularly because you may be the only favorable eyewitness
to certain facts.
89. The computer "readout"
on breath machine tests must be 100% correct or it will
be subject to being excluded by the court upon proper motion
filed by your attorney.
90. On the night of your arrest,
complete the DUI client intake questionnaire found in Appendix
F. Don't delay in doing this. In the morning, supplement
the form with any additional data that you remember.
Chapter VIII
91. Radio frequency interference
may occur in police stations or in "mobile" testing
facilities and may cause several brands of breath testing
machines to give artificially high readings.
92. Because a skilled DUI attorney "knows the ropes"
it is always advisable to utilize an attorney who is a specialist
in DUI case. Not only can the attorney assist in developing
a strategy for your case, but can also be instrumental in
obtaining a more favorable sentence if you decide to plead
guilty or nolo contendere.
Chapter IX
93. A motion for speedy trial
forces the prosecutor to bring the case to trial, or suffer
a dismissal as a result of failing to meet the statutory
deadline set by state law.
94. By use of a motion for a Bill of Particulars, a defense
attorney may cause the prosecutor to commit himself to a
specific trial strategy. By narrowing the focus of the trial,
the defense attorney may be able to undermine the prosecutor's
case, leading to a dismissal of the charges.
95. Whenever state law permits
a preliminary hearing, the defense attorney may benefit
from using this pretrial hearing to obtain sworn testimony
from the witnesses for the prosecution which cannot later
be changed or embellished to suit the needs of the state's
case.
96. A defense attorney may
use a motion in limine to suppress evidence to eliminate
the state's principal evidence against you in the case (the
BAC test result) thereby effectively winning the case.
97. When breath testing machines
are utilized by the state to obtain your BAC reading, all
documents relating to such machines should be subpoenaed
and closely scrutinized to determine if all calibration
and inspection has been followed to the letter. The failure
of the state to comply with the mandates of the operator's
manual can lead to exclusion of the BAC test results.
98. A motion for disclosure
under Brady v. Maryland will sometimes uncover potentially
exculpatory evidence which will effectively negate the state's
evidence.
Chapter X
99. Where the judge refuses
to excuse a biased juror from the jury panel in your case,
such refusal will constitute reversible error in the event
you are convicted.
100. Once the state has put up all of its witnesses and
evidence, and has "rested", the defense attorney
can seek to have the judge decide that the evidence in the
case is insufficient to support the defendant's conviction.
This is called a motion for directed verdict of acquittal.
Chapter XI
101. During closing arguments,
where the prosecutor argues to the jury using inflammatory
and impassioned arguments that are not relevant to the issue
of the driver's guilt or innocence, reversible error occurs.
Excerpted from the book, 101
Ways to Avoid a Drunk Driving Conviction by William C. Head,
Esq. and Reese I. Joye, Jr., Esq. The book is available
for $19.95 + shipping/handling and applicable tax. Call
404-250-1113 for orders.
ORDER NOW FROM AMAZON.COM!
Copyright 1991 by William C.
Head and Reese I. Joye, Jr. Not to be reprinted, resold,
or redistributed for profit, except with written permission,
but may be freely distributed electronically provided that
the entire file, including this notice, remains intact.