Summary of Michigan's
DWI / UBAL / OUIL / OWI / OUIN Law
The
following charts show the penalties for drunk driving and license suspension
violations in Michigan.
| Crime |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
OUIL
/ UBAC / OUID
§625(1) |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
1 or more of the following:
Up to 93 days jail; $100 - $500 fine; up to 45 days comm svc
Licensing:
30/150 days susp./rest.
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
Permissive up to 180 days
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
$200 - $1000 fine And one or more of the following: 5 days to
1 year jail; 30-90 days comm svc.
Licensing:
minimum 1 year revocation/denial
Plate
conf: Required
Immob:
Required 90 to 180 days unless forfeited.
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
| |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
OWI
§625(3) |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
1 or more of the following:
Up
to 93 days jail; up to $300 fine; up to 45 days comm svc.
Licensing:
90 days rest.
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
Permissive up to 180 days
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
$200 - $1000 fine And one or more of the following: 5 days to
1 year jail; 30-90 days comm svc.
Licensing:
minimum 1 year revocation/denial
Plate
conf: Required
Immob:
Required 90 to 180 days unless forfeited
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
| |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
Zero
Tolerance
§625(6) |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
Up to $250 fine OR up to 60 days comm svc, or both.
Licensing:
30 days rest.
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
None
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
One or more of the following: up to 60 days comm svc; up to $500
fine; up to 93 days jail.
Licensing:
90 day susp OR if prior §625 then minimum 1 year revocation/denial
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
None
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
| |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
Child
Endangerment
§625(7) |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
$200 - $1000 fine AND one or more of the following: 5 days to
1 year jail; 30-90 days comm svc.
Licensing:
90/90 susp./rest.
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
Permissive up to 180 days
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
Felony
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
$500 - $5000 fine And either of the following: 1-5 years prison;
probation with 30 days to 1 year jail AND 60-180 days comm svc.
Licensing:
minimum 1 year revocation/denial
Plate
conf: Required
Immob:
Required 90 to 180 days unless forfeited
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
| Endangerment
- Zero Tolerance w/occupant < 16 |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
One or more of the following: up to 60 days comm svc; up to $500
fine; up to 93 days in jail.
Licensing:
90/90 susp./rest.
Plate
conf: see 1st, 2nd offense
Immob:
see 1st & 2nd
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
$200 - $1000 fine AND one or more of the following: 5 days to
1 year jail; 30-90 days comm svc.
Licensing:
revoke
Plate
conf: see 1st, 2nd offense
Immob:
see 1st & 2nd
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
Permissive
|
| |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
.04
CDL Commercial Drivers License
§625m(1) |
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
Up to $300 fine OR up to 93 days jail, or both
Licensing:
CDL - 1 year susp., OPR 90 days rest., HAZ - 3 year susp.
Plate
conf: None
Immob:
Permissive up to 180 days
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
Misdemeanor
Fine/Jail/Comm
Svc:
Up to $1000 fine OR up to 1 year prison, or both
Licensing:
CDL - minimum 10 yr rev., OPR 1 yr rev./den.
Plate
conf: Required
Immob:
Required 90 to 180 days
Reg
Deny: None
Forf:
None
|
| |
1st
Offense |
2nd
Offense |
| Drug
Law Violations |
Misdemeanor
ALL
Licensing:
30/150 susp./rest.
|
Misdemeanor
ALL
Licensing:
60/365 susp./rest.
|
2003
Changes to Michigan's Drunk Driving Laws
( DWI / UBAL / OUIL / OWI / OUIN )
OVERVIEW
In
July of 2003, the Michigan legislature passed and the Governor signed
into law two bills designed to bring Michigan into compliance with the
National Highway Transportation Safety Administration's requirement
that all states adopt a blood alcohol threshold of .08% for drunk driving
offenses. Although the amendments make this change, they includes a
number of other significant changes to the existing law. The following
are some of the more significant changes.
OPERATING
WHILE INTOXICATED
The
legislation changes the name of the offense from Operating Under the
Influence of Liquor to Operating While Intoxicated. That offense includes
both operating with a blood alcohol level of .08% or more, as well as
operating while under the influence of alcohol, a controlled substance,
or a combination of alcohol and a controlled substance.
OPERATING
WHILE IMPAIRED
The
legislation retains the offense of Operating While Visibly Impaired.
However, there is no longer a blood-alcohol threshold used to prove
OWI.
PRESUMPTIONS
GONE
Under
the prior statue, a person was presumed OUIL if he or she had a BAC
of .10% or greater; OWI if he or she had a BAC of greater than .07%
but less than .10%; and not impaired if he or she had a BAC of .07%
or less. Those presumptions are gone from the new legislation. While
it is unlawful to drive with a BAC of .08% or more, there is no longer
a presumption that a person is not impaired with a BAC of .07% or less.
Thus, it is possible for a prosecutor to charge impaired driving even
if a person has a BAC level of .07% or less.
NEW
OFFENSE OF DRIVING WITH ANY AMOUNT
OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE
Bound
to be one of the most controversial aspects of the new legislation,
the statute now includes the offense of Operating with Any Amount of
a Schedule 1 Controlled Substance (opiates, opium derivatives, hallucinogens,
marijuana, GHB, and ecstasy) or cocaine in the blood stream. This part
of the new statute has nothing to do with keeping impaired drivers off
the road since most of these drugs can be found in the blood stream
days after they were taken while the impairment is usually gone in hours.
In fact, with a hair test, it is possible to find these substances in
a person's body up to 90 days after the fact. Since the new statute
prohibits a person from operating a vehicle if "the person has in his
or her body any amount" of a controlled substance, this is presumably
not limited to breath, blood or urine. The new offense is treated the
same as Operating While Intoxicated in terms of jail time, fines, costs,
community service, and licensing sanctions.
IGNITION
INTERLOCK DEVICES
The
new statute allows the court to require the installation of an ignition
interlock device as a condition of probation for both driving while
intoxicated and driving with any amount of a controlled substance.
Thus, while an offender may have only a six month license suspension
from Secretary of State, the court can require the ignition interlock
device installed throughout the term of probation (up to two years).
COURT
CANNOT ALLOW PLEA TO ZERO TOLERANCE IF ORIGINALLY CHARGED WITH GREATER
OFFENSE
The
new legislation slightly changes the rules regarding pleas to zero
tolerance offenses. Where the old statute allowed the court to accept
a reduced plea from another alcohol offense to a zero tolerance offense
with agreement of the prosecutor, the new law only allows the court
to dismiss the original charge on motion of the prosecuting attorney.
Thus, reduced pleas to zero tolerance offenses, while still possible,
will be more cumbersome.
PRESUMPTION
REGARDING BAC AT TIME OF DRIVING
The
new statute slightly changes the presumption regarding a person's
blood alcohol level at the time of the offense. The old law allowed,
but did not require, the fact finder to presume that a person's BAC
at the time of testing was the same as it was at the time of driving.
The new law makes that presumption mandatory. While the presumption-like
any other legal presumption-may be overcome, it now appears to be
the defendant's burden to disprove the assumption by affirmative evidence.
IMPLIED
CONSENT SUSPENSION LENGTHENED
The
new law lengthens the time of implied consent suspensions to one year
for a first implied consent refusal and five years for all subsequent
implied consent refusals within a 7 year period.
MINOR
TRANSPORTING ALCOHOL - IMPOUNDING OWNER'S VEHICLE
Within
30 days of a minor's conviction for transporting alcohol in a motor
vehicle, the arresting officer may make a complaint against the owner
of the vehicle to show cause why the vehicle should not be impounded.
If the court determines that the vehicle was being driven with the
express or implied consent of the owner (whether or not the owner
knew the minor was transporting alcohol), and if the court determines
that the vehicle is not needed by the owner in the direct pursuit
of the owner's employment, the court may order the vehicle impounded
for a minimum of 15 days and a maximum of 30 days.
CHANGES
TO SENTENCING GUIDELINES OV-3 AND OV-18
The
new law changes the sentence guidelines scoring to reflect the new
lower .08% BAC threshold. Thus, OV-3 includes 50 points for death
resulting from a drunk driving offense where the offender had a BAC
of .08% or more. Similarly, OV 18 does away with the 5 points for
a BAC of .07% or more but less than .10%, and folds all offenses with
a BAC of .08% or more but less than .15% into the 10 point category.
EFFECTIVE
DATE AND SUNSET PROVISION
The
new statute takes effect September 30, 2003. For some reason, it includes
a sunset provision, making the new .08% BAC threshold expire on October
1, 2013, at which time the BAC threshold reverts back to .10%.