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Wisconsin
OWI Attorneys - Home
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WISCONSIN OWI DEFENSE
LAWYER
Tracey A. Wood
Madison location serving Madison, Baraboo, Wisconsin Dells, Jefferson, Janesville, Darlington, Dodgeville, Lancaster, Juneau, Portage, Prairie du Chien, Viroqua, Sparta, Mauston, Montello, Stevens Point, Wausau, La Crosse, Black River Falls, Eau Claire, Elkhorn, Waukesha Beaver Dam, Friendship, and Juneau, Wisconsin.
Click Below For Directions To Our Office:
Map of 10 E Doty St
Madison, WI 53703-3391, US
Phone: (608) 284-1200 Fax: (608) 284-1260
Toll
Free: 1-888-OWI-WOOD
(1-888-694-9663)
Email: attorney@vanwagnerandwood.com
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If you are facing a drunk driving
charge you want answers--FAST!
This website provides you
with comprehensive information about Wisconsin drunk driving
laws and defenses, Wisconsin License Revocation and test
refusals, answers to frequently asked questions, explains
the many defenses available in drunk driving cases, plus
provides exclusive links to eminently qualified drunk
driving defense attorneys in every state.
Get a FREE
evaluation of your case by completing our CONFIDENTIAL
online initial questionnaire. Upon receipt of your
initial questionnaire, we will contact you personally
within 24 hours (48 hours if over the weekend). Our attorneys
and support staff stand ready to assist you in weathering
the stressful days ahead as we investigate and challenge
your pending charges. We understand the serious nature
of your situation and want to help you deal with the stressful
and complex issues of a drunk driving arrest.
WARNING!
If you refused to take a breath or blood test after being
arrested for OWI in Wisconsin, you have ten days, not
counting Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays, from the
date in the upper right corner of the form (usually the
date you were stopped, but sometimes the next day if you
were stopped shortly before midnight) in which to demand
a "refusal hearing." If you don't file the "refusal
hearing demand" within this short time period, you'll
lose your license for at least one year, and potentially
as many as three years (depending on whether you've had
drunk driving or refusal convictions in past years, anywhere
in the United States). Click Here to get more information
about saving your driver's license NOW before it's too
late.
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