30 Ways
To Fight Your DUI…And Win
DUI cases are rarely hopeless. DUI convictions
are almost never inevitable. Clients retain
our California DUI defense attorneys for one
reason: they want to fight the case. And win.
The DUI prosecutor will
point to several factors as evidence that you
were drunk driving: poor navigation of your
vehicle, an odor of alcohol flowing from the
breath, the appearance of being intoxicated,
poor performance on the field sobriety test
and, of course, the results of the blood or
breath alcohol test. Yet each “piece
of DUI evidence” is
ambiguous, subject to multiple interpretations,
unreliable, based on faulty assumptions and
open to attack.
Below are 30 defenses our DUI defense lawyers
might raise in a typical case. Obviously, not
every one applies in every case. But the list
gives you a flavor for the sorts of problems
plaguing the state’s evidence. Contrary
to popular belief, DUI cases do not rest on
hard science. They rest on pseudo-science,
often times junk science.
Unfortunately, hundreds
of innocent people get convicted of DUI every
court day, often by pleading guilty even in
the face of spurious prosecution evidence.
Hopefully, you won’t be one of them.
1. GERD Or Heartburn Caused A Falsely High
Reading On The DUI Breath Alcohol Test
Suffering from Gastroesophageal
Reflux Disease (GERD), acid reflux or heartburn can “fool” the
DUI breath machines, causing an inaccurately
high reading of the blood alcohol level.
The breath machine is supposed to receive and
measure alcohol from the deep lung tissue,
a region of the lungs called the alveoli. Breath
alcohol concentration from this “alveolar
air" or “deep lung air” is
thought to correlate with blood alcohol concentration.
But GERD can cause alcohol to travel from the
stomach back to the throat and mouth. When
this happens, the DUI suspect blows this “mouth
alcohol” (rather than alveolar air alcohol)
into the breath machine. The machine then provides
a reading higher—often times dramatically
higher—than the DUI suspect’s true
BAC. A person with a true BAC of .05 can read
.20.
This problem is not limited
to those who suffer from regular or chronic
GERD. Anyone who recently ate a large meal,
a greasy meal or a spicy meal may experience
acid reflux or heartburn. If you take a DUI
breath test during this period, the results
may be erroneously high.
2. The DUI Police Officer Failed To Read
You Your Miranda Rights
Police must advise you of your Miranda
Rights in a DUI case if (1) you are in custody and
(2) they question you seeking to illicit an
incriminating response. If the officers continued
to interrogate you after placing you in custody
for DUI, and did not first read you your Miranda
rights and obtain a valid waiver, then your
post-custodial statements will likely be excluded
from evidence.
3. Weaving Within Your Lane Does Not Justify
A DUI Traffic Stop
Many DUI traffic stops occur because the officer
claims to observe the DUI suspect weaving within
his/her lane, perhaps with the tires touching
the fog line or yellow lane divider, or briefly
encroaching into the neighboring lane. Courts
have ruled that this usually does NOT justify
a DUI traffic stop—unless an “experienced
officer” observed “pronounced weaving” for
a “substantial distance.” If the
court finds that your traffic stop was not
justified, the entire DUI case will most likely
be dismissed.
4. Alcohol On Your Breath Does NOT Mean The
Driver Is Under the Influence
In explaining why he believes you were drunk,
the DUI officer almost always mentions smelling “a
strong odor of alcohol on the suspect’s
breath.” But the officer looks foolish
on cross-examination when he admits that alcohol
itself (ethanol) has no odor. Rather, it’s
the mixing agent or flavoring that produces
the odor we associate with alcohol. If you
doubt this, go to the market and buy a 6-pack
of O’Doul’s. It tastes and smells
just like beer; but it contains no alcohol.
Indeed, laboratory studies show that police
officers’ perceptions of how strongly
a person’s breath smells of alcohol simply
doesn’t correlate with his/her actual
blood alcohol level. All that can be gleaned
from the “odor of alcohol on the breath” is
that a DUI suspect probably consumed some alcohol
recently. But it does not provide evidence
that the person drank enough to be “under
the influence” or to have a BAC .08 or
higher.
5. The Officer Lacked Probable Cause For
The DUI Arrest
After conducting the roadside DUI investigation,
the officer can only arrest you (apply the
handcuffs and take you away for a chemical
test) if he/she has “probable cause.” This
means the evidence must rise to a level in
which a reasonable DUI officer would believe
a crime (drunk driving) has been committed.
You are entitled to a special court proceeding—called
a “suppression hearing” or “1538.5
hearing”—in which a judge decides
whether the DUI officer had probable cause
for the arrest. At the hearing, the officer
testifies and is cross-examined by the DUI
defense lawyer.
Our firm conducts this hearing routinely in
DUI cases. If the judge decides the officer
who arrested you for DUI lacked
probable cause, then the subsequent breath
or blood alcohol test is excluded from evidence.
Often, the entire case is dismissed.
In practice, judges usually side with the prosecution
at the suppression hearing, finding that probable
cause existed. Still, the hearing provides
an invaluable opportunity to question the officer
and confront him/her about the problems with
the DUI investigation. This often leads the
prosecution to reduce the charge or to settle
the DUI case on terms more favorable to the
defense.
6. There Are Innocent Explanations For Your
Faulty Driving
Perhaps the DUI officer saw you swerving for
a short distance, make a wide turn or drift
out of your lane. Of course he will paint these
as sure signs of drunk driving. But in reality,
sober drivers engage in these sorts of driving
miscues all the time.
How often do you see a car drifting around
in its lane, only to look over and notice the
driver on the cell phone? Or reading a map?
Or eating? Usually, the “bad driving” the
DUI officer claims to observe is just as consistent
with a distracted or inattentive driver—but
otherwise sober driver—as it is with
a drunk driver.
7. The Alleged Signs of DUI Are Actually
Signs Of Fatigue
Many of the “typical” symptoms
associated with DUI can just as easily be explained
by fatigue. Sheer exhaustion often causes one
to drive his/her vehicle poorly, to have bloodshot
and watery eyes, to respond slowly to some
of the DUI officer’s questions, and to
struggle with the field sobriety tests that
require vigilance and good coordination.
To be sure, driving while exhausted or drowsy
driving is dangerous in its own right, and
should be avoided. But the symptoms of driving
while exhausted can easily be confused with
the symptoms of driving while intoxicated.
Your DUI defense attorney must emphasize to
the court these non-alcohol-based explanations
for the officer’s observations.
8. Your Blood Alcohol Level Was Rising
A DUI suspect can blow a .15 at the police
station; but have had a .07 BAC when he got
pulled over. Why? Because alcohol takes an
average of 50 minutes, but can take as long
as three hours, to absorb fully into your bloodstream
and create your peak blood alcohol level. This
is critical if the DUI traffic stop occurred
relatively soon after you finished drinking.
Your
BAC was probably still rising. This means
that even if your BAC was above .08 when the
blood draw or breath test occurred at the police
station (or hospital), it may well have been
below .08 when you were actually driving. There
is no law against having a BAC above .08 at
a police station; it’s only the blood
alcohol level while actually driving that counts
for DUI purposes.
9. An Improper 15-Minute Observation Before
The Breath Alcohol Test
California regulations require the officer
to watch the DUI suspect continuously for at
least 15 minutes prior to administering the
breath
alcohol test. The officer must make
sure that during this period the person does
not consume anything, burp, belch, hiccup or
regurgitate. Any of these may cause alcohol
to travel from the stomach to the mouth. Blowing
this “mouth alcohol” into the breath
machine triggers an exaggeratedly high BAC
reading.
Officers rarely follow this required observation
procedure. They usually perform paperwork,
write reports, set up the machine and converse
with their partners, diverting their attention
from the DUI suspect who must be watched vigilantly
during this period. Failure to follow this
procedure casts doubt on the validity of the
test result, and can sometimes get the test
thrown out of court altogether.
10. The Police Officer Lacked Justification
To Make The DUI Traffic Stop
Police officers cannot pull you over arbitrarily.
To conduct a lawful traffic stop, the DUI officer
must provide “specific articulable facts” indicating
a “reasonable suspicion” that you
were committing a traffic violation. You are
entitled to a special court proceeding called
a “suppression hearing” where a
judge determines whether the DUI officer can
meet this standard. If he cannot, in all likelihood
the entire DUI case will be dismissed.
11. Failure To Comply With California’s
Title 17 Regulations
California
Code of Regulations Title 17 sets
forth procedures that must be followed by anyone administering DUI blood or breath alcohol tests.
Officers break these regulations all the time
in DUI investigations. A failure to follow
the regulations can expose the BAC test results
to attack, or lead to their exclusion from
evidence altogether.
12. Inherent Error Rate In DUI Blood and
Breath Alcohol Testing
Let’s assume maintenance and calibration
of the machines are perfect, the breath or
blood test is administered exactly according
to procedure, and no background or physiological
factors exist that would produce false results
(and, by the way, such a “perfect scenario” is
rare).
An inherent error still exists as to both blood
alcohol testing procedures. Most experts agree
the inherent error rate is about +/- .02 for
DUI breath testing and +/- .005 for DUI blood
testing.
13. The DUI Officer Has No Baseline For Your
Performance On The Field Sobriety Tests
The DUI officer will probably claim you “performed
poorly” on the field
sobriety tests,
and that this serves as evidence of impairment.
But “poorly” compared to what?
This claim means very little without knowing
how you would perform normally—even with
nothing to drink. Indeed, people vary tremendously
in their natural ability (or inability) to
perform DUI field sobriety tests.
How well a given person performs the filed
sobriety tests depends on many factors: natural
level of coordination and equilibrium, natural
level of balance, fitness level, composure
in the face of pressure, injuries, age and
practice, among others.
14. Factors Other Than Alcohol Can Cause
Poor Performance On DUI The Field Sobriety
Tests
Even if you performed less than perfectly
on the DUI field sobriety tests, this may be
attributable to unfair test conditions such
as:
- The tests occurring on uneven surfaces
or slippery terrain
- The distraction of flashing
lights and traffic whizzing by
- The test area being
too dark or amidst glaring lights
- ]Cold temperatures, rain or wind
- Unsuitable
footwear—such as boots,
high heels or dress shoes
- Nervousness, anxiety
and/or frustration
Most people who had nothing to drink would
still struggle with the FSTs under these conditions.
The upshot is this: even if you struggled on
the roadside tests, this may well be attributable
to the setting and circumstances rather than
attributable to you being intoxicated.
15. The DUI Standardized Field Sobriety
Tests Were Not Properly Administered
The National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) devised national standards for how
DUI officers are to administer the three standardized
field sobriety tests: the Horizontal
Gaze Nystagmus Test, the Walk-and-Turn
Test and the One-Leg
Stand Test. But DUI officers often fail to
adhere to these national guidelines. Many never
even received training as to the NHTSA guidelines.
This opens up their whole DUI investigation
to attack.
Indeed, often times a DUI officer will say
in his report the DUI suspect “failed” or “performed
poorly” on the field sobriety tests;
but when the performance is judged according
to NHTSA’s national standards, the person
did everything correctly! This underscores
a basic fact of DUI defense: the arresting
officers are biased and frequently do slipshod
DUI investigations. Their claims and opinions
should never be taken at face value.
16. The Non-Standardized Field Sobriety Tests
Lack Reliability
The non-standardized field sobriety tests
include (among others) the finger-to-nose
test , the finger
count test, the hand
pat test,
the coin pickup, the alphabet test, the reverse
counting test and the Rhomberg
test (tilting
your head back and estimating 30 seconds).
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) has set no standards for how to administer,
score or interpret these tests, and no studies
have ever shown them to be reliable indicators
of DUI impairment.
17. Field Sobriety Tests Provide A Poor Measure
Of DUI Impairment
Even when the standardized field sobriety
tests are administered perfectly (which is
rare), they still provide a very inaccurate
measure of whether a DUI suspect is impaired.
According to NHTSA, for example, the one leg
stand test has a 65% accuracy rate and the
walk-and-turn test a 68% accuracy rate.
This means that if people were convicted
based on these roadside tests, one third of
them would be innocent and wrongly convicted.
Or, viewed another way, when officers arrest
DUI suspects based on failing these tests,
one in three suspects is wrongfully arrested.
18. Mouth Alcohol Can Contaminate The Breath
Alcohol Test Results
Ideally, DUI breath testing devices detect
alveolar air of the deep lungs, which is loosely
correlated with blood alcohol level. But the
breath testing machine can be “tricked” by
latent alcohol in the mouth—often caused
by burping, belching, or the recent use of
cough syrup, cold medicine, mouthwash or breath
spray.
When the breath testing machine picks up mouth
alcohol rather than deep lung air, it gives
BAC readings greatly higher than the true BAC.
This becomes a particular problem for DUI arrestees
with dentures, denture adhesives, braces, cavities,
food impactions, orthodontic work or who have
food particles trapped between their teeth
(as all of these conditions tend to produce
mouth alcohol).
19. Blood-Breath Partition Ratio Is Inaccurate
Based on Individual Differences
DUI breath testing assumes that “breath
alcohol” accurately reflects blood alcohol
based on a 2100-to-1 partition ratio. This
assumption rests on the proposition that the
average ratio across the population is 2100-to-1.
But studies reveal that the ratio of blood
to breath varies greatly among individuals.
A DUI suspect with a ratio lower than 2100-to-1
will generate an inaccurately high reading
from a breath alcohol test. And there’s
no way to determine what a given person’s
ratio is, or what it was at the time of the
DUI breath test.
20. The Breath Alcohol Test Yields Unduly
High Results During Absorption
Breath alcohol testing while alcohol is still
absorbing into your bloodstream often yields
falsely high BAC readings. During the absorption
stage, which can last as long as three hours
after you finish drinking, the BAC in arterial
blood is significantly higher—as much
as 60% higher—than the BAC in venous
blood. Because the alveolar deep-lung air blown
into the breath machine is bathed in arterial
blood, not venous blood, a falsely high BAC
is generated.
21. Police Have No “Special Ability” To
Judge Intoxication Levels
Police and DUI prosecutors like to suggest
that trained and experienced officers have
a “special ability” to discern
when a DUI suspect is under the influence (and
therefore jurors should defer to the officer’s
opinion that the DUI defendant was, in fact,
impaired).
But a controlled study by Rutgers
University’s
Alcohol Behavior Research Laboratory found
otherwise. Police officers’ ability to
judge intoxication levels was no more accurate
than that of bartenders or social drinkers.
Moreover, none of the three groups—experienced
police officers, bartenders or social drinkers—correctly
judged levels of intoxication more than 25
percent of the time.
22. No Sign Of Mental Impairment
Being “under the influence” consists
of two types of impairment: mental and physical.
Most police will admit that upon being pulled
over, the DUI suspect was coherent, alert and
responded appropriately to the officer’s
questions. Therefore no sign of “mental
impairment” existed.
But, as any DUI toxicologists will tell you, “mental
impairment” always precedes “physical
impairment.” So if mental impairment
was not present, then, presumably, neither
mental nor physical impairment was present.
23. Innocent Explanations For The Symptoms
Of Intoxication
Police officers almost always claim to have
observed certain “objective symptoms
of intoxication” in the DUI suspect.
The standard list includes:
- Bloodshot and watery
eyes
- Slurred
speech
- A flushed face and
- An unsteady gait
DUI police reports feature pre-printed boxes
for these symptoms that officers merely check
off. Of course, the officers almost never photograph,
videotape or audiotape the DUI suspect so that
jurors can later judge for themselves whether
and to what extent these symptoms were present.
In any event, non-alcohol causes often explain
these observations. For example, fatigue, allergies
and eye strain cause bloodshot eyes. Nervousness,
embarrassment and anger over the DUI traffic
stop cause flushing. Intimidation and fluster
cause slurred speech.
The officer rarely takes these innocent explanations
into account. The DUI defense attorney must
emphasize to the jury that the evidence is
just as consistent with non-alcohol explanations
as it with intoxication.
24. Speeding Is Not Correlated With DUI
In many of our DUI cases, the officer pulled
the client over for speeding. And the officer
alleges the client to be under the influence
based (at least in part) on the fact the client
was speeding. But national studies demonstrate
no correlation between speeding and intoxication.
A speeding driver is no more likely to be drunk
than sober. To be sure, speeding is often unsafe
and a violation of the law in its own right;
but it is not evidence the driver is DUI.
25. Radio Frequency Interference May Have
Contaminated Your BAC Tests
Radio waves in the air—known as Radio
Frequency Interference (or RFI)—can alter
the results of almost any DUI blood or breath
alcohol testing device. Radio Frequency Interference
can disturb the electronic circuitry of Los
Angeles County’s Datamaster, San Bernardino
County’s Draeger
Alcotest 7110, gas chromatographs
and mass spectrometers, resulting in exaggeratedly
high blood alcohol readings.
Radio Frequency Interference emits from almost
any electronic device, including police radios,
police scanners, radar devices and computers.
Although studies have confirmed the danger
of Radio Frequency Interference or electromagnetic
interference to render false BAC readings,
it is difficult to determine whether or to
what extent RFI altered the result in a given
DUI case. Yet it is one more reason for skepticism.
26. Breath Testing Machines Mistake Other
Chemicals for Alcohol
DUI Breath alcohol testing machines also detect
non-alcohol compounds, which they frequently
mistake for alcohol. Among the compounds most
commonly mistaken for alcohol are ethylene,
toluene, nitrous oxide, diethyl ether, acetonitrile
and isopropanol.
The presence of any of these compounds in the
DUI suspect’s lung tissue will likely
cause a false, or falsely high, blood alcohol
reading. We find that people frequently ingest
these compounds at work or in other environments
where the chemicals are present.
27. Low-Carb Diets Can Cause Falsely High
DUI Breath Test Readings
A DUI suspect on a low-carb diet may generate
an erroneously high blood alcohol reading from
the DUI breath testing machines. On a high-protein
diet, the body produces ketosis as it burns
stored body fat for energy (a process that
has produced dramatic weight loss for many
adherers to Adkins-style
diets ).
Consumption of carbohydrates (such as alcoholic
beverages) during ketosis can cause the body
itself to produce a substance called “isopropyl
alcohol.” Most DUI breath testing machines
cannot distinguish “isopropyl alcohol” from
ethanol (the alcohol that we drink and that
causes impairment).
28. Breathing Techniques May Alter Breath
Test Results
Breathing techniques may produce falsely high
breath test results. A longer breath sample—more
than 10 seconds—may generate a significantly
higher BAC reading because the machinery is
calibrated to test a 10 second sample. Additionally,
a person who breaths shallow or holds her breath
may blow residual mouth alcohol, again producing
a higher reading than her true BAC. Hyperventilation
may also impair the test.
29. Breath Temperature May Alter Breath Test
Results
Most DUI breath devices calibrate to test
breath at 34 C. Simulator solutions use the
same temperature. But when a DUI suspect’s
breath temperature varies—as is often
the case—this can produce a falsely high
BAC result. Even a variation only one degree
higher can produce a BAC reading 7% higher.
30. A “Disconnect” May Exist
Between Your BAC And Symptoms Of Intoxication
Certain symptoms of intoxication can predictably
be observed at each successively higher blood
alcohol level. Often we see DUI cases where
the person’s BAC reading comes back very
high, two or three times the legal limit.
However, the person’s driving, behavior
and FSTs are consistent with sobriety or only
slight impairment. We know the BAC reading
is wrong. It doesn’t match the other
evidence. We call this a “disconnect
case.” Any time the alleged blood alcohol
level does not match up with the symptoms we
would expect to see at that level, the prosecution’s
whole DUI case is called into question.
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