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GENERAL BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON DWI
A. Answers to your Questions
Many
non-intoxicated persons are legitimately stopped for a traffic
offense and thereafter arrested for DWI. Of course,
the many of those arrested are guilty of DWI. However, it
is also true that a great number of innocent people are also
arrested for suspicion of DWI.
Below is some basic information about DWI cases.
1. What is DWI?
DWI is a criminal offense that says a person may not drive
a motor vehicle in a public place while "intoxicated".
The DWI statute does not say driving while drunk or "drunk
driving."
2. What does "intoxicated" mean?
A person need not be drunk to be "intoxicated" but
a person who is drunk must be intoxicated. "Intoxicated"
is defined by the DWI statute in two ways. First, a
person is "intoxicated" when she drives and, when,
through the use of an alcoholic beverage, drug, controlled
substance, or any combination thereof, has lost the "normal"
use of either her "mental" or "physical"
faculties. Second, a person is "intoxicated"
when she drives and has an alcohol concentration of .08 or
more in her body. It is important to realize that .08 an hour
after the arrest does not necessarily mean that the person
was at/above .08 when he or she was actually driving. This
is particularly true if the driver's last drink was immediately
prior to the time that she was stopped by the police.
3. Whose "normal mental and physical faculties"
are we judged by and "what is normal"?
The "normal mental and physical faculties" the DWI statute
refers to are those of the particular person who has been
arrested. The term does not refer to the normal faculties
of the arresting officer, the jurors in a DWI criminal trial,
or those of an "average" person. The term "normal"
actually refers to a range of measurement of the faculties
of the person arrested.
4. What is .08 alcohol concentration?
"Alcohol concentration" is defined by the statute
as:
a. the number of grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood;
b. the number of grams of alcohol per 210 liters of breath;
or,
c. the number of grams of alcohol
per 67 milliliters of urine.
If you've been drinking, unless you are a physicist, an engineer,
or a chemist, and have a calculator, you will not be able
to determine if you have an alcohol concentration of .08 or
more. Furthermore, it is worth knowing that the amount
of alcohol in each of the above statutorily defined concentrations
is not equal, and can therefore result in a person being innocent
according to one concentration but guilty according to another.
Moreover, under the two statutory definitions of intoxication,
it is also possible for a person to be innocent of being intoxicated
because there is no loss of either normal mental or physical
faculties but still be guilty of being intoxicated via .08.
The opposite can also be true.
5. Is it .08 or more when I drive or .08 or more at the
time I'm tested, or both, that will make me guilty of DWI?
As mentioned earlier, Texas law only provides that
the crime of DWI occurs when a person drives, and at that
time, has an alcohol concentration of .08 or more in his
body. It is not a crime to have an alcohol concentration
of .08 in the body either before or after one has driven,
as long as the driver still had the normal use of his mental
and physical faculties while driving. However, depending
on the time the test is conducted, such an alcohol concentration
may be relevant, but not necessarily dispositive, in determining if the person had a .08 or
more alcohol concentration when the actual driving occurred.
The timing of the particular test in question can present
significant problems for both the prosecution and the defense
in the trial of a DWI case. This dilemma arises because .08
alcohol concentration testing is hardly ever done at or immediately
after driving. Generally, an alcohol concentration test
is usually administered approximately 45 minutes to 1 hour
and 15 minutes after driving. Consequently, unless
there is information about the number of alcoholic drinks
consumed, the type of drinks consumed, and knowledge of when
the drinks were consumed, it is scientifically impossible
to determine if the person was over, or more importantly for
the innocent, under a .08 alcohol concentration at
the time of driving.
Imagine the following scenario: Let's say that a person finishes
her fourth alcoholic beverage at 11:55 p.m. She leaves the smoke-filled restaurant at
12:00 a.m. for a 5 minute drive home. At 12:01
a.m., on the way home, she is stopped by the police because
her vehicle's inspection sticker had expired two days earlier.
The officer, having observed a fresh "strong" odor of an alcoholic
beverage on the driver's breath and her smoke reddened eyes,
arrests her for DWI. The officer then transports her
to the station house for an alcohol concentration test.
The test is given at 12:30 and its result is .081. Here, depending on
the timing of the person's earlier consumption of alcoholic
drinks, it is equally possible that earlier at 12:01 a.m., the person's alcohol concentration was .05, that
is, below the .08 level. In the final analysis on this
point, it may not have been a smart thing for our person to
have driven at all, but if she was driving with a level of
.05, she did not commit the offense of DWI if she had not
lost the use of her normal physical or mental faculties when
she was driving. In other words, she was NOT GUILTY of the
charge of DWI.
6. If I decide to submit to chemical testing and my alcohol
concentration is less than .08, can I still lose my license?
Yes, but this is usually the result of a subsequent criminal
conviction for DWI or a related offense. For your driver's
license to be automatically suspended as a result of
chemical testing, the alcohol concentration taken from your
blood, breath, or urine must be .08 or more while driving.
7. How reliable are the police methods used to
determine alcohol concentration?
Texas law provides that testing of alcohol concentrations
can be performed by analysis of a DWI suspect's urine, blood
or breath. All three of these testing methods, however,
can leave much to be desired.
Urine testing is the least accurate and least reliable means
of alcohol concentration testing. Indeed, there appears
to be no debate in the scientific community that this method
of alcohol concentration testing is the least accurate method
of testing.
Blood testing, unlike that of urine testing, is thought by
the majority of forensic scientists to be the most accurate
and reliable means of alcohol concentration determination.
From a police perspective, however, it is also thought to
be the least desirable and least convenient method.
Further, like the testing of urine specimens, it provides
an opportunity for the arrested person to recheck the blood
test. If found to be erroneous, the validity of the
police test can be attacked by re-testing the exact specimen
taken and tested by the police.
From
a law enforcement perspective, breath testing is the most
convenient means of alcohol concentration determination.
In regard to the issues of accuracy and reliability of breath
testing, however, there continues to be a considerable debate
within the scientific community. Additionally, under
current procedures for breath testing in Texas, unlike most blood tests, breath samples are not
preserved for subsequent analysis of the initial test result.
8. How is breath testing done?
Police breath alcohol concentration testing in Texas is usually performed by a machine named an Intoxilyzer 5000.
The Intoxilyzer machine is said
to work on the basis of infrared light absorption by alcohol
detected in a person's breath. According to its manufacturer
and the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), which certifies
and writes the rules for its use, the machine determines alcohol
concentration by subtracting the amount of light absorbed
from the person's breath sample and then compares that amount
to the amount of light originally introduced into the breath
sample. The difference is the test result.
9. What is the debate over the Intoxilyzer's
reliability?
Proponents of the Intoxilyzer say
it will only show a result from absorbed breath (deep lung
air) alcohol and nothing else. However, opponents say
that the Intoxilyzer often misreads
other commonly found substances in human breath and erroneously
attributes them to alcohol.
Of particular importance here are several facts. First,
the DWI alcohol concentration law says a person is intoxicated
when he has a .08 concentration in his breath. The law does
not say .08 by the Intoxilyzer.
Second, neither the manufacturer nor the DPS will allow anyone,
other than law enforcement personnel, to test either the machine's
accuracy or its reliability. It is generally understood
that for a procedure to be accepted as accurate and reliable
in science, that it must be open and available for the scientific
community to test and retest the procedure. This is
simply not the case with the Intoxilyzer.
Third, the manufacturer says it does not warrant that the
Intoxilyzer is fit for any particular purpose. This
fact clearly is an implicit admission by the manufacturer
that its machine is not even warranted to be accurate or reliable
for breath testing.
Fourth, the Intoxilyzer is capable
of breath preservation, however, our DPS purposely fails to require
the breath specimens to be saved. The cost of preservation
would be less than $2.00 per test and would allow an opportunity
for the person charged with DWI to check the accuracy of the
sample. And, if it is found to be inaccurate, the defense
could attack the validity of the prosecutor's test.
Indeed, it is a generally accepted scientific fact that the
re-testing of preserved breath specimens, which is done by
a method known as gas chromatography, is a more accurate and
reliable means of breath alcohol concentration testing than
that done by the Intoxilyzer.
Fifth and finally, the Intoxilyzer's
working design is premised on the assumption that every person
tested is exactly the average person. We all know that
all persons are not exactly average. Human beings come in
all different sizes, weights, ages, muscle tones, lung capacities,
alcohol tolerances, temperatures, hematocrit levels, and blood/breath ratios. Automatic
and undetected error can be illustrated by simply having the
person tested not be exactly average. In this regard,
it should be noted that the Intoxilyzer assumes a
blood/breath ration of 2100/1 (i.e., 2100 parts of alcohol
in the blood for every 1 part of alcohol in the breath) for
every person tested. Here, it can be noted that a majority
of persons have a blood/breath ration of 2100/1 or greater.
Persons with a higher blood/breath ration of 2100/1 will not
be prejudiced by the Intoxilyzer's
assumption. However, persons with a lower blood/breath
ration will be prejudiced because the Intoxilyzer
will erroneously read too high of an alcohol concentration
result, thus potentially causing a person who should test
at .04, .05, .06, etc. to actually test out at artificially
higher levels. It should be noted that scientists have identified persons with blood/breath
ratios as low as 1100/1.
This same type of prejudice also occurs where the person tested
is not exactly average with respect to other bodily functions:
muscle development, temperature, hematocrit
level, etc. Furthermore, since the machine was built
by humans, is serviced by humans, and is operated by humans,
it is subject to human error just like all other machines.
The above facts conclusively demonstrate that the Intoxilyzer,
even if it is properly working and is being properly operated,
because the person being tested is not exactly average,
can label an innocent person as guilty.
10. Are crimes of DWI and public intoxication different?
Yes, they are different. Specifically, the statutory
definitions of the term "intoxicated" are not equal
in regard to the two charges. The DWI intoxication definitions
(loss of normal mental or physical faculties and/or .08 or
more) require a lesser measure of intoxication than does public
intoxication (P.I.). A person is "intoxicated"
for purposes of P.I. when she is either a danger to herself
or a danger to others. In addition, police officers
usually videotape DWI suspects, both at the scene and
in jail, and persons holding drivers licenses have conditionally
pre-agreed to take either a breath or blood test, upon request,
after their arrest for DWI. No such agreement or videotape
procedure exists for P.I. Finally, the punishments for
DWI, which are discussed in the following section, and P.I. are different. Specifically, P.I.
is in the lowest category for criminal offenses, it is a Class
C misdemeanor which carries with it the possibility of a fine
up to $500.00 -- no incarceration may be assessed upon conviction
for this type of misdemeanor.
11. What are the penalties for DWI?
DWI, depending on the number
of prior convictions a person has and when those convictions
occurred, can be either a misdemeanor or a felony offense.
Generally
speaking, the penalties for DWI are as follows:
a)
first offense: a first-offense conviction
includes a fine not to exceed $2,000.00 and/or the possibility
of serving jail time from 3 days to 180 days, and a driver's
license suspension of 90 to 365 days. (Class B Misdemeanor).
b)
second offense: the maximum fine increases
to no more than $4,000.00 and/or jail from 30 days to one
year, and a possible driver's license suspension ranging from
180 days to 2 years. (Class A Misdemeanor).
c)
third offense: here, you may receive
a fine up to $10,000.00 and/or 2 to 10 years of imprisonment,
and suspension of your driver's license ranging from 180 days
up to 2 years. (3rd Degree Felony).
d)
DWI with an open alcohol container (first offense):
In addition to the penalty referenced above you face a minimum
6 days in jail and a fine of no more than $2,000.00.
(Class B Misdemeanor).
e)
DWI with an accident where serious bodily injury occurred
as a proximate cause of the intoxication: this crime is
called intoxication assault, and upon conviction you may serve
a minimum of 2 years up to a maximum of 10 years in jail.
Additionally, you may be fined up to $10,000.00. (3rd
Degree Felony).
f)
DWI where a death has occurred as a proximate cause of
the intoxication: here, the crime is intoxication manslaughter.
Upon conviction you might have to pay a maximum fine of $10,000.00
and/or be imprisoned from 2 to 20 years (Intoxicated Manslaughter or Manslaughter
with use of Deadly Weapon are both 2nd Degree Felonies).
In some of the above
minor classifications you may be eligible for probation, but
there is no guarantee that you will receive a probated jail
sentence or fine. If you are convicted of intoxication
assault and wish to receive probation, a minimum of 30 days
in jail must be served as a condition of probation.
Additionally, to receive probation upon being convicted of
intoxication manslaughter you must serve a minimum of 120
days in jail. However, if you are convicted of Intoxication
Assault or Intoxication Manslaughter and the court or jury
finds that you committed the offense with a deadly weapon
you may be ineligible to receive probation at all.
Standard
Misdemeanor DWI Conditions of Probation include:
1.
Report once a month to a probation officer,
2.
Not to commit any further crimes during the term of probation,
3.
To pay a monthly supervisory fee to the probation office (approximately
$40.00),
4.
To perform a specified number of community service hours during
the term of your probation (between 24 and 80 hours) (community
service is volunteer work to benefit the community),
5.
To attend DWI awareness classes dealing with the effects of
alcohol or listening to victims of DWI related tragedies,
6.
To disdain from consuming alcohol for the term of your probation,
7.
To pay your non-probated fines and court costs,
8.
Any other requirements the court sets for you.
12. How can
be a motor vehicle be a "deadly weapon"?
A motor vehicle is a "deadly weapon" where an alcohol related
accident results in a death. Recently, the Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals has held that intoxicated drivers who
are involved in such accidents can be found to have used a
"deadly weapon. If death results from the manner of use of
the vehicle, the vehicle could be a "deadly weapon" in the
eyes of the law. In these cases, the manner of use was capable
of causing death and therefore, the driver's were found
to have used a "deadly weapon."
13.
What special conditions are placed upon bond for DWI
?
For a first offense, bond conditions are a matter of discretion
for the court. However, if you are charged with a subsequent
offense of DWI or a first offense of Intoxicated Assault or
Manslaughter, you are required to install a vehicle ignition
interlock device on your car and are not allowed to operate
a motor vehicle unless it is equipped with an interlock device.
This interlock device determines the presence of alcohol in
your breath. If the device detects a certain level of
alcohol, the vehicle is temporarily disabled.
A judge may, however, decide that justice would not be served
by installing an interlock device on your vehicle, and can
excuse its installation. However, some judges require
that all DWI defendants, install
an interlock device on their car, even if it is their first
arrest.
14. Is a person "required" to take a breath, blood or urine
test when requested by a police officer?
Possibly, but read this section and the next section carefully.
Texas law deems that all persons who drive with Texas licenses have already conditionally agreed, after
their arrest, to take either a breath or blood test upon being
properly requested to do so by a police officer. This
deemed consent only arises where the person has driven in
a public place. Examples of public places are public
roads, highways, and other places where the public or a substantial
part of the public may gain access. There is no such
deemed consent, or as it is sometimes called "implied
consent" for a urine test. This area of the law appears
to be evolving at this time.
15. Does a person have a choice to refuse a required breath
or blood test?
Generally speaking, yes. See Section 17, below. Our
law provides that where the implied consent law is applicable,
the person arrested for DWI may refuse to take the requested
test. Such a refusal, however, can result in the following
penalties:
1. Suspension
of your driving privileges for 180 days if this is your first
arrest for DWI,
2.
A two year suspension for a subsequent arrest within ten years
if, in the first arrest you refused to submit to testing,
and,
3.
The admission into evidence of your refusal to take the test
in the subsequent DWI criminal trial. The purpose of
this admission, from the prosecutor's viewpoint, is to imply
to the jury, that the suspect refused because she believed
that she was too intoxicated to pass the test.
If you do submit to alcohol concentration testing and fail,
your driver's license privileges can be suspended, and the
test result may come into evidence in the criminal trial.
The possible suspension periods are as follows:
a)
90 days if your driving record shows no prior alcohol related
arrests,
b)
One year if you have a prior conviction or suspension within
the preceding ten years.
16. Does a person have a choice to refuse being videotaped?
No. However, although a person has no right to refuse
being videotaped, he does have the right to refuse to perform
any police field sobriety exercises and to refuse to answer
any questions, the answers to which, might be incriminating.
Unlike breath or blood test refusals, there are no penalties
for refusing to perform field sobriety tests or refusing to
answer questions while being videotaped.
17. May a police officer use force on a person to make
him take a breath or blood test?
Sometimes for blood but never for breath. An officer
has authority to order a blood sample from an arrested person
only if there has been an accident where a death has resulted,
a death is likely to occur, or there has been a serious bodily
injury.
18. Can a person drink an alcoholic beverage while driving
a car?
No. It is a class C misdemeanor for a driver to operate a
car and personally possess an open alcoholic beverage container.
This penalty, as noted earlier, increases if the driver is
arrested for DWI. Additionally, recent legislation also
prohibits any passenger from having an open alcoholic container
unless the person is a passenger in a limousine, bus, taxi,
or the living quarters of a motor home.
19. Do I have the right to use the telephone to call an
attorney for assistance prior to/during questioning?
No. While you can legally refuse to answer questions
prior to/after arrest, there is no statute or court decision
that provides that the police must allow you access to a telephone
in order for you to speak to an attorney for advice and assistance.
However, a person arrested for any allegedly criminal activity
has a constitutional due process right of reasonable access
to a telephone to contact an attorney for the purpose of arranging
bail, preserving exculpatory evidence, and in deciding whether
to answer interrogation questions asked by police. Once an
arrested person clearly invokes her right to counsel, the
interrogation should stop.
20. If I refuse a chemical
test or if I'm found to have an alcohol concentration of .08
or more at the time of vehicle operation, can anything be
done to prevent my license from being suspended?
Recent changes in the law allow law enforcement officers to
immediately seize the driver's license of a person arrested
for DWI if the person either refuses or fails a chemical test.
If this happens, the officer should also issue the citizen
a temporary driving certificate authorizing the person to
drive legally for forty days. Furthermore, although
your license has been seized, you have the right to what is
called an Administrative License Revocation Hearing (these
are commonly called ALR hearings). After you are arrested
for DWI and either refuse or allegedly fail the chemical test,
a peace officer is required to give you written notice that
your driver's license will be suspended. After the officer
does that, you will have 15 days from that date to request,
in writing, a hearing from the Department of Public Safety
(DPS) headquarters in Austin. Alternatively, if you fail to request a hearing,
you waive that right and your license will be suspended on
the 40th day after receiving notice. It is very,
very important that the ALR Hearing be requested by you or
your lawyer within the 15 day period.
If the officer fails to provide you with notice of your license
suspension, the DPS will mail a notice to you, via certified
mail, that your driver's license
is subject to suspension. This is important because
instead of the 15 days to file for a hearing from the date
of your arrest, you now have 15 days from the date you receive
the DPS notice. Notice is presumed to have been received
5 days after it is mailed, triggering the 15 day time limit
to request a hearing. Accordingly, do not rely on receiving
notice from the Department to request a hearing or you might
end up waiving that right. This is also a good time
to confirm that the address on your driver's license is correct
with DPS, because that is where the DPS will send the notice.
For notice by mail purposes, your driver's license address
is your mailing address, even if it is the incorrect address.
This is because you have a duty to report address changes
to the DPS within 30 days of moving. Accordingly, be
sure to have your license address changed if you have moved
since obtaining your license.
When you make your request for an ALR hearing, the suspension
of your driver's license is stopped while you await the hearing,
although your temporary permit is only initially good for
forty days. Should your ALR hearing be scheduled more
than 40 days after your arrest, your attorney can ask the
DPS to extend your provisional license until your ALR can
be heard. Furthermore, if you lose your hearing, you
also have the right to appeal. To appeal, you must request
the appeal within 30 days after the judgment becomes final.
Otherwise, you waive the right to appeal and your driver's
license will be suspended on the 40th day after
the judgment becomes final. Again, while you are waiting
for the appeal to be heard, your driver's license suspension
is stopped, but only for a period of 90 days. Your license
will be suspended on the 91st day, even if your
appeal has not been ruled upon. Here, however, if you win
your appeal, then your suspension is lifted. Whether
your suspension can be prevented is, however, dependent upon
whether you have been convicted of an alcohol related offense
or had any suspensions imposed against your driving privileges
within the past 10 years, or whether your driver's license
has been suspended in relation to a drug or alcohol related
offense in the past 10 years. If you fit into one of
these categories, your driver's license is suspended on the
40th day after the final judgment during the period
that your appeal is pending. Again, however, the suspension
is vacated if you win your appeal. Finally, if you ultimately
lose your license to a suspension, you can still have it reinstated
if you win your DWI case by being found "not guilty" by a
judge or jury.
21. Why is it important to request a hearing?
There are a number of very good reasons to request an ALR
hearing. First and most importantly, the best reason
to request such a hearing is to attempt to save your driving
privileges. Second, by requesting an ALR hearing, you
force the State of Texas to prove the police officer that stopped and arrested
you did so with either reasonable suspicion or probable cause.
By litigating these issues, you ensure that your rights are
protected. Also, if the State fails to prove that probable
cause or reasonable suspicion existed to stop or detain you,
it might be prevented from re-litigating the same issues in
your subsequent criminal prosecution for DWI. This could
result in a dismissal of the criminal charges against you.
In the ALR hearing there are two possible theories of prosecution
that the State will argue. The first is that you refused
to take an alcohol breath-test and the second is that you
took such a test and failed it. The DPS must prove the
following depending upon the facts of your case:
a)
Suspension based on a refusal:
If
you have refused to submit to chemical testing then our law
requires the State of Texas to prove the following at an ALR hearing:
1)
reasonable suspicion or probable cause existed to stop or
arrest you;
2)
probable cause existed to believe you operated a motor vehicle
in a public place while intoxicated;
3)
you were placed under arrest and properly requested to submit
to chemical testing; and
4)
you refused the test upon proper request of the officer.
b)
Suspension based on a test failure:
The
issues are slightly different if you submit to and fail chemical
testing. If you fail, the DPS must prove the following
two issues:
1)
that you had an alcohol concentration of .08 or more
while operating a motor vehicle in a public place and at
the time of testing; and
2)
that there was probable cause to
arrest or reasonable suspicion to stop you.
Proof is generally submitted in the form of the arresting
officer's written affidavit, but sometimes subpoenas are issued
and the officer actually testifies. In either event,
a skilled and knowledgeable attorney is a necessity to ensure
that your rights are protected.
22. If my driver's license is suspended because I refused
a chemical test or because I was convicted of DWI, then what
are the penalties for driving while the license is suspended?
This type offense, known as Driving While
License Suspended (DWLS), is a misdemeanor and carries
with it the possibility of 3 days up to 6 months incarceration
and $100.00 to $500.00 fine for each violation, unless it
is enhanced to a Class A Misdemeanor. Then the
penalties will increase.
Fortunately, in many instances, if your driver's license is
suspended you may apply for an Occupational Driver's License.
To receive an Occupational Driver's License the law requires
that good cause be shown. Examples of "good cause"
under Texas law would be going to and from work, taking children
to and from school, going to and from a religious service,
traveling to or from a grocery store, or traveling to or from
a medical facility for treatment. This license allows you
to drive during a 12 hour period
per day. This privilege is, however, subject to restrictions.
However, you cannot be issued an Occupational License if you
already had one in the last 10 years. Also, you might
be required to install an alcohol interlock device on your
car and fulfill some of the same requirements necessary for
probation.
23.
How long will a DWI arrest stay on my record and will it
effect my automobile insurance rates?
If a person receives a final conviction for DWI it will always
remain on her record. Our expunction law does, however,
allow for the destruction of arrest records if a number of
very specific conditions are met. Unfortunately, the records
relating to a driver's license suspension or revocation are
not subject to expunction, even though the arrest records
may be expunged. In reference to insurance rates,
a DWI conviction could easily result in considerably higher
insurance costs for many years.
24.
Are there different DWI
laws for minors?
Yes. Although minors between the ages of 18 and 20 may
be charged and prosecuted under the adult DWI laws, the laws
for minors differ significantly than those for adults.
There, the issue is not whether a minor drove while intoxicated,
but rather, a minor need only to have driven while under
the influence of alcohol to be convicted (DUI).
The law states that a minor commits an offense if he operates
a motor vehicle in a public place while having any detectable
amount of alcohol in the minor's system. Furthermore,
although Texas law prohibits the prosecution
and conviction of juveniles for many offenses, the legislature
has made special exceptions to prosecute juveniles who drink
alcohol and drive.
25.
What is a Minor for purposes of DWI and DUI?
A minor is any person under twenty-one years of age.
Thus, a minor is not necessarily a juvenile. Persons
between 18 and 21 years of age may be classified as minors,
but they may also be prosecuted as adults.
26.
Can police ask a minor to take the breath test?
Yes, the law in this area is the same as it is for an adult.
Texas law deems that all persons who drive with a Texas license have already conditionally agreed, after
being arrested, to take either a breath or blood test upon
being properly requested to do so by a police officer.
A proper request requires the officer to not only read a required
statutory script, but also, to furnish the written script
to the arrestee before the test request is made. Again,
as mentioned earlier, there is no deemed consent for urinalysis
testing.
27.
Can a minor accused of DUI refuse to take the breath test?
Yes, however, a minor's refusal to submit to a properly requested
breath test will result in the following penalties:
1. suspension of your driving
privileges for not less than 120 days if this is your first
arrest for an alcohol related driving offense. If you
were arrested but do not have a license, the state will not
issue one to you for 120 days.
2. a 240 day suspension of your driving
privileges if your record reflects one or more drug or alcohol
related offense during the five year period preceding your
arrest.
28. What if a minor takes the breath test and
it shows .08 at the time of driving?
Texas law states that if a minor has any detectable amount
of alcohol in his system, the minor's driving privileges will
be automatically suspended for not less than 60 days, even
when the minor takes a breath test and the result shows an
alcohol concentration less than .08 at the time of driving.
Furthermore, if the test result confirms the presence of alcohol
or any other drug in the minor's system,
that evidence will be used against the minor a subsequent
criminal prosecution for DWI or DUI.
29. Does a DWI or DUI conviction impact a minor's
driving privileges?
The Department of Public Safety will automatically suspend
the license of any minor convicted of an alcohol related driving
offense for one year. Furthermore, if the Department
can show that the minor is addicted to the use of alcohol,
then the minor becomes ineligible to keep or obtain a driver's
license.
30.
Can a juvenile minor go to jail for an alcohol related
driving offense?
Yes. The Juvenile Justice Code classifies first-offense
DUI and other alcohol-related driving offenses as delinquent
conduct indicating a need for supervision. What this
means is that a juvenile convicted of first offense DUI can
be placed on probation or committed to the Texas Youth Commission
for confinement and rehabilitation. Furthermore, a minor
above the age of 17 can be sentenced to up to 180 days jail
on the third conviction for DUI or the first conviction for
DWI. Interestingly, however, a police officer who charges
a minor with DUI is not required to take the minor into police
custody, but may merely issue the minor with a citation and
court summons.
31.
What are the penalties for DUI and minors?
Generally speaking, the penalties for Driving Under the Influence
of alcohol as a minor, in addition to suspension of your driving
privileges, are as follows:
a) First Offense: Class C misdemeanor.
If you are under age 18 the court will require your
parent or guardian to be present with you at every
court appearance. Furthermore, the parent or guardian
can be forced to attend by the court. Upon conviction,
a minor may be fined, and will be required to complete a minimum
of 20 and a maximum of 40 hours community service related
to education about or prevention of misuse of alcohol.
Additionally, the minor will be required to attend an alcohol
awareness program sponsored by the Texas Commission on Alcohol
and Drug Abuse within 90 days. Furthermore, if the minor
is under age 18, the court may require the minor's parent
or guardian to attend the program with the minor. If
the minor fails to complete the alcohol awareness course within
the 90 day period the court may impose an additional license
suspension up to six months. For a first offense the
minor may receive deferred adjudication, however, an order
of deferred adjudication for DUI is considered a conviction.
If the minor receives only one conviction for DUI (while a
minor), that conviction may be expunged from his record after
his 21st birthday.
b) Second Offense: Everything for a first-offense
conviction applies to a second conviction, with the following
exceptions: The minor will be required to complete a
minimum of 40 and a maximum of 60 hours community service
related to education about or prevention of misuse of alcohol.
Furthermore, a second or any subsequent conviction may not
be expunged from your record, however,
the minor may still receive deferred adjudication for a second
offense.
c) Third Offense: Class B misdemeanor.
For a third offense the minor will still be required to complete
between 40 and 60 hours of community service, however deferred
adjudication is no longer an option. As with the first
two offenses the minor will be required to attend an alcohol
awareness program within 90 days of your conviction, and if
the minor is under age 18 a parent or guardian will be required
to attend both the minor's court appearances and the alcohol
awareness program. If, on the other hand, the minor
is 18 years of age or older at the time of his third offense,
the penalty is much higher. Specifically, the minor
will receive a fine ranging from $500.00 to $2,000.00; confinement
in jail for up to 180 days; or both a fine and some jail time
in addition to a license suspension.
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