Five
Myths About Defending Accused Drunk Drivers
by William
C. Head
Reprinted with
permission of TRIAL (March 1993)
Copyright the Association of Trial Lawyers of America
Almost every attorney
is at one time or another confronted with a client, friend, or family
member charged with drunk driving. Because accused drunk drivers
are immediately charged with a crime, drunk-driving cases represent
the single largest category of criminal infractions of all reported
cases, with about 200,000 more cases processed each year than all
theft and larceny offenses combined.1 Even attorneys
who do not generally handle criminal matters are routinely asked
how an accused person should proceed in a drunk-driving case.
In the 1960s, driving
under the influence of alcohol was considered a minor offense, leading
to modest fines; in the 1990s, it is considered the most serious
misdemeanor offense. In several states, repeat offenders are considered
felons.
Nearly 2 million drunk-driving
cases are filed by law enforcement officers around the country every
year.2 These cases take up a large portion of the criminal
docket of most court systems. Because the penalties for drunk driving
have increased, many of those charged with this crime now must seriously
consider alternatives to pleading guilty or nolo contendere.
For the rest of the 1990s, the absence of palatable alternatives
for the accused driver will lead to a dramatic increase in these
trials.
Most attorneys harbor
many myths and misconceptions about this offense. These can lead
to malpractice. In this article, I will address five myths about
defending accused drunk drivers.
Myth Number 1:
Most people accused of this crime are guilty.
This is perhaps the most
troubling mythone harbored by attorneys and the general public.
In my opinion, an attorney who believes this should never represent
a person accused of drunk driving. That mind-set can eliminate objectivity.
In the overwhelming majority
of drunk-driving cases in which a chemical test is obtained by police,
an infrared breath analysis machine is used, not a blood test.3
This primary evidence is vulnerable to attack by a skillful practitioner.
Most attorneys have no
idea how woefully inadequate infrared breath machine are as evidence-gathering
devices. These machines are so unsophisticated that virtually no
scientist would ever trust the results as a basis for scholarly
research or scientific investigation. Yet attorneys assume that
since the state has approved the machine, its accuracy and reliability
are not subject to challenge.
There are at least 30
ways to rebut the evidence from these machines if the attorney understands
how the machines work, what causes them to malfunction, and that
they are nonspecific for alcohol.4 Without doing exhaustive
research, no attorney would understand their internal workings enough
to cross-examine the state's witnesses effectively on their alleged
accuracy.
The "opinion"
evidence gathered by police officers typically consists of field
or roadside sobriety tests. These agility tests are supposed to
indicate that the person suspected of drunk driving was actually
impaired or in some way "a less safe driver."
Recent scholarly studies
have shown that field sobriety tests are not given uniformly, there
is no scientific basis for assuming they are valid, and most officers
either require the wrong tests or improperly instruct the suspect
on how to perform the tests.5 A defense attorney can
obtain a pre-trial ruling that the tests and their alleged indication
of impairment must be excluded from evidence due to lack of scientific
foundation and faulty instructions.
Any other "observation"
evidence from a police officer will generally be inconclusive and
subject to many interpretations by experts. For example, bloodshot
eyes can be caused by conditions other than drunkenness, including
contact lenses, allergies, or lack of sleep. The defense attorney
should analyze the evidence that will likely be presented and take
the time to investigate the medical background of clients and the
environmental contaminants they have been exposed to. Most alleged
evidence of intoxication can be neutralized or eliminated from the
state's presentation with findings from this investigation.
The defense should leave
no stone unturned. These cases require detailed investigation, as
does a complex murder case that involves fiber evidence, ballistics
tests, or other intricate issues. Attorneys who do not investigate
thoroughly and defend the client aggressively do the client a disservice
and expose themselves to possible liability. In addition, they harm
the legal profession by failing to fully represent the client.
Myth Number 2:
Drunk driving is a minor offense.
Many veteran attorneys
remember when drunk-driving convictions led to fines of $50 to $150,
with no suspension of driving privileges and no penalties beyond
going to court, paying the fine, and being chastised by the judge.
Those days are gone.
One reason some attorneys
still do not give proper consideration to these cases is that their
only contact with the client occurs when they enter the plea. The
attorney doesn't experience the penalties that later befall the
client.
A client accused of drunk
driving deserves to be represented zealously because an unjustified
conviction will have repercussions lasting for the rest of the client's
life. Not all the "penalties" for these convictions are
legal in nature.
The stigma of a conviction
can exact a severe psychological toll.
A substantial number
of drivers whose licenses are suspended continue to drive.6
Typically, they do so to provide for themselves and their families,
despite the possibility of being jailed for driving with a suspended
license. A surprising number are never caught. Yet, they live in
terror of being stopped at a license check or a roadside sobriety
checkpoint. Those unjustly convicted should not have to live with
this hardship.
Most of those convicted
also suffer serious financial and social consequences. In most states,
a drunk-driving conviction can never be removed from a driving record,
so convicted offenders must endure the consequences of their convictions
for the rest of their lives.
Some blame themselves,
because they know that they had something to drink before they were
stopped by the police. However, it is not illegal for adults to
drive after drinking alcoholic beverages in any state. The crime
of drunk driving occurs only when the person's blood-alcohol level
has exceeded the arbitrary numerical standard set by the state,
or when the person has demonstrated bad driving that can be causally
connected to impairment due to a high blood-alcohol level.
Most attorneys would
cringe at the thought that they might have poorly represented a
client on a civil matter and that the substandard representation
could come back to haunt them. Malpractice in drunk-driving cases
carries the same potential for litigation, except that most convicted
drivers don't realize that their attorneys may not have properly
represented them when advising them to plead guilty or nolo
contendere without first checking into the facts of the case.
The client doesn't know whether the state's case was validly made
or based on an illegal stop. The client is not familiar with the
many ways that breath machines may be inaccurate. That is why people
need attorneys in the first place-to investigate the case thoroughly
and recommend the best alternative.
Myth Number 3:
Any attorney can defend an accused drunk driver.
If a friend or relative
asked me for help on a matter involving antitrust litigation, my
response would be to consult an expert in the field. I would probably
inquire with the state bar association or phone colleagues to try
to locate an expert in antitrust law. I would try to send the client
to the most skilled lawyer I could find who specializes in this
area of practice.
When a prospective client
walks into the average law office and asks for help on a drunk-driving
case, some attorneys will agree to represent that person even if
they have never handled criminal matters. The attorney may advise
the person to plead guilty or nolo contendere (depending
on state law) and work out an arrangement with the court to keep
his or her license with the least possible suspension time. The
attorney may not adequately investigate the facts of the case or
get copies of documents and other evidence that are readily available
through discovery.
These naive attorneys
don't realize how much exposure to liability they have if they counsel
clients to give up their constitutional and statutory rights and
plead guilty to this serious offense. Yet these same attorneys would
probably not hesitate to refer these same clients to specialists
if they were charged with securities fraud.
Some clients discover
the folly of their plea before the statute of limitations on their
potential malpractice claim against their former attorney expires.
A suit for malpractice may be the only way they can hope to achieve
some semblance of recovery for the devastating effects of a drunk-driving
conviction.
After a conviction, these
clients soon learn what most drunk-driving specialists already know:
The penalties are not only serious, but like the Energizer bunny
in the TV ads, they keep going and going and going. Consequences
like license suspension, fines, community service, probation, mandatory
counseling or alcohol treatment, and possible incarceration (even
for first offenders) are well known. These cases also carry a plethora
of other consequences that will confront the convicted driver days,
months, or even years after.
For example, in most
states insurance rates for convicted drunk drivers will increase
500 percent to 1,000 percent above the premiums paid before the
conviction (if coverage isn't canceled).7 In South Carolina,
a person with a five-year-old car carrying only liability coverage
can expect to pay $10,000 to $11,000 in additional premiums over
the first three years after a first-offense drunk-driving conviction.8
This increase in insurance
costs is well known. But many attorneys are unaware that most credit
bureaus now include drunk-driving convictions on credit reports.
This not only will affect future credit, but it may also prevent
convicted drivers from getting jobs where the prospective employer
runs a credit check in processing job applications. A drunk-driving
conviction may bar or restrict employment alternatives with a significant
segment of the job market.9
Other penalties have
been imposed on defendants in different states. They include the
following:
- College students charged
with or convicted of drunk driving have been suspended from school
for at least one semester or one quarter.10
- Recipients of unemployment
benefits who have drunk-driving convictions have had their benefits
eliminated.11
- Those in military
service who are charged with or convicted of drunk-driving offenses
can be summarily discharged or required to take extensive alcohol-education
courses, restricted to military bases, deprived of normal base
privileges, or saddled with other forms of punishment.12
- Professionals (like
attorneys and judges) may be disciplined by their professional
regulatory authorities.13
Many people wrongly convicted
of drunk driving need not passively suffer these consequences. Relief
may be as close as the nearest attorney who handles legal malpractice
cases. Any judge or jury will sympathize with former trusting clients
who can show that they lost jobs or homes and suffered other serious
penalties as a result of a conviction that should never have occurred.
Myth Number 4:
These cases can't be won.
This is the most prevalent
myth about these cases. Not only do members of the general public
believe this; so do many attorneys. In fact. experienced drunk-driving
defense lawyers "win" most cases of first offenders when
there is no evidence of a wreck or other manifest bad driving.
The term "win"
is in quotation marks here because winning may mean having the charge
reduced to a different offense or otherwise obtaining a plea bargain
that avoids a conviction. The availability of alternative plea arrangements
for offenders varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
Where jury trials are
available, success rates for acquittal are surprisingly good. The
national average for acquittals is about 50 percent for those accused
of drunk driving if their cases are heard by juries. In some jurisdictions,
only about 20 percent to 30 percent of all drunk-driving arrests
lead to a conviction, while other states have an 80 percent to 90
percent conviction rate.14
In the few states that
have abandoned the right to jury trials for misdemeanor drunk-driving
cases,15 defense attorneys will have a more difficult
task convincing a judge to acquit. However, this only applies to
about 5 percent of all drunk-driving cases.
The formula for success
is to investigate exhaustively; conduct pre-trial discovery and
motion practice aggressively; use evidentiary maneuvers and procedural
devices skillfully; and present a well-conceived, thoroughly choreographed
trial with expert witnesses, character witnesses, and other tried-and-true
tactics for successful defense of criminal cases.
Many people know someone
who has been charged with this offense and pleaded guilty or nolo
contendere. Because most people believe that these cases are
difficult or even impossible to win, the average client will not
challenge the trusted attorney's "sage advice."
Attorneys who enter pleas
of guilty or nolo contendere for these clients will never
win those cases. Their files for these clients probably contain
only three or four pieces of paper, clearly indicating that they
have not performed "due diligence" investigations. Granted,
the client may have told the attorney that he or she could not afford
to contest the charges. But was the client fully informed of the
penalties that will follow a conviction? If the client had known
this, would the client have chosen to seek a trial to challenge
the state's case?
In explaining to clients
why they should consider pleading not guilty and letting a jury
decide their fate, I often compare receiving a conviction for drunk
driving with receiving a diagnosis of cancer. Getting rid of the
problem may be expensive and difficult and will involve some risks,
but the alternative is much worse.
This may seem like a
bad analogy, but consider the "cancer" that attacks the
lives of convicted drunk drivers. Some have committed suicide after
incarceration for drunk driving. Certainly, people who suffer from
untreated cancer (or their survivors) will not be pleased if they
later discover that the doctor should have recommended surgery,
not vitamin therapy. Similarly, people who suffer the consequences
of ill-advised guilty pleas to drunk-driving charges will not be
pleased with their lawyers.
Myth Number 5:
Drunk-driving cases are just like any other criminal case.
Nothing could be farther
from the truth. In many areas, the courts handle these cases differently
from other offenses. Here are two examples that make the point.
First, consider the normal
prosecution where the state proposes to use physical evidence as
part of its case-in-chief. For example, suppose John Doe is charged
with murder, having allegedly shot Tom Jones. The prosecution will
normally order ballistics tests, take blood spatter patterns and
fingerprints, and collect other physical evidence. That evidence
is always subject to independent analysis by the defense attorney
representing the accused.
This is not true in drunk-driving
cases, where breath tests usually are not required to be preserved.
Very few states require police officers taking a breath sample to
capture some of the breath so it can be analyzed independently at
a later date.16 Yet, all modern breath-analysis machines
can provide sealed samples at a minimal cost. The U.S. Supreme Court
has said that it is perfectly acceptable that such critical evidence
is destroyed, even where the state could have preserved it for less
than $1 per sample.17
Another consideration
is the use of roadside sobriety checkpoints (roadblocks) at which
drivers are briefly detained to determine if they are under the
influence of alcohol or drugs. More than 40 states permit this,
and the U.S. Supreme Court has given its stamp of approval to this
encroachment on our Fourth Amendment rights.18 A few
states like Louisiana and Texas have ruled that their state constitutions
provide protection against such arbitrary searches and seizures.19
Manifestly unfair judicial
decisions have been rendered in many other areas in an effort to
stamp out drunk driving.20 A book could be written about
these unfair and unconstitutionally premised state court decisions.
Suffice it to say that the judicial system has erected difficult
hurdles for practitioners who defend drunk-driving cases.
No attorney likes to
hear the word "malpractice." However, I am convinced that
faulty representation in these cases is blatant attorney malpractice.
Often, the attorney's negligent handling of a drunk-driving case
is attributable to a defeatist attitude.
Lawyers must take these
cases seriously. Either they must fully educate themselves on this
subject so they can provide an effective defense, or they must refer
these cases to lawyers with expertise in the field. This will protect
these clients from great harm and provide the lawyers with many
peaceful nights, free from the concern that they may have improperly
advised a client.
Notes
1 JAMES C.
FELL, NAT'L HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMIN., REPEAT DWI OFFENDERS
INVOLVEMENT IN FATAL CRASHES (1992).
2 James C.
Fell, Drinking and Driving in America, 14 ALCOHOL, HEALTH
& RES. WORLD 24 (1990)
3 J. GARY
TRICHTER & W. TROY MCKINNEY 1 TEXAS DRUNK DRIVING LAW 37 (1991).
4 See
generally REESE I. JOYE & JAMES LOVETT, THE TRIAL WORKBOOK
(1986).
5 Spurgeon
N. Cole & Ronnie M. Cole, New Proof That Field Sobriety
Tests Are "Failure Designed," DWI J.: L. & SCI.,
Feb. 1991, at 1; Jonathan D. Cowan & Susannah G. Jaffee, Field
Sobriety Tests: The Flimsy Scientific Underpinnings DWI J.:
L. & SCI., Dec. 1990, at 1.
6 Ralph Hingson
& Jonathan Howland, Use of Laws to Deter Drinking and Driving,
14 ALCOHOL, HEALTH & RES. WORLD 38 (1990).
7 Adam Gelb,
Georgia 's DUI Scandal: Car Insurers Often Fail to Flag Driving
Records, ATLANTA J., Nov. 6, 1991, at D1, D3.
8 SOUTH CAROLINA
DEP'T OF INS., DUI: DIED UNDER THE INFLUENCE (1991).
9 Action against
employees varies from state to state and employer to employer. In
non-union companies operating in states with no right-to-work laws,
employees have less protection against discharge based on a drunk-driving
conviction because they can be fired "at will." Employers
can justify the termination by citing "insurance factors,"
diminution of employee versatility, or more general grounds, such
as the employees' "lack of judgment."
10 State v.
Webb, No. ST-92-CR-1689 (Ga., Clarke County Super. Ct., arrested
June 7, 1992) (before trial for an alleged drunk-driving offense
the University of Georgia notified the defendant of a proposed immediate
suspension for one quarter).
11 Markel
v. City of Circle Pines, 479 N.W.2d 382 (Minn. 1992).
12 U.S. CONST.
amend. I, §8; Dep't of Defense Directive 5525.7; U.C.M.J. Article
15.
13 See
Gary Taylor, MADD at Lawyer, NAT'L L. J., Mar. 9, 1992,
at 2 (article about Texas sole practitioner facing disbarment proceedings
for drunk driving); sidebar, NAT'L L. J., May 11, 1992,
at 2 (citing Massachusetts case where superior court judge retired
after misconduct charges based on an arrest for suspected drunk
driving were brought against him).
14 FELL, supra
note 1.
15 See
Blanton v. City of North Las Vegas, 489 U.S. 538 (1989). Nevada,
New Jersey, and New Mexico are among the states that allow no jury
trial for first offenders.
16 Only six
states require preservation of breath samples: Alaska, Arizona,
Colorado, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, and Vermont.
17 California
v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479 (1984).
18 See
Michigan Dep't of State Police v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990).
19 State v.
Church, 538 So. 2d 993 (La. 1989); Higbie v. State, 780 S.W.2d 228
(Tex. Crim. App. 1989).
20 State v.
Powers, 555 So. 2d 888 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1990), Bryant v. State,
410 S.E.2d 778 (Ga. Ct. App. 1991); State v. Tosar, 350 S.E.2d 811
(Ga. Ct. App. 1986)
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