|
Sample
Drunk Driving Cases Handled by William C. Head
Case
26
State v. T.K.
Bibb State Court
Macon, Georgia
T.K.,
a professional jet skier from Florida, was in Macon for a race/competition.
The night before the race, he and his friends went to dinner at
Applebee's and later to Rockabilly Club, where he consumed two beers.
Shortly after leaving the club, T.K. and his friends were pulled
over for speeding and weaving into the emergency lane. The officer,
after smelling alcohol coming from the car, asked T.K. if he would
submit to some field sobriety tests. T.K. performed the horizontal
gaze nystagmus, walk and turn, and one leg stand tests.
Before
asking T.K. to perform these tests, the officer never asked him
a single preliminary question about his physical ability to execute
the tests, something that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) requires. Moreover, T.K. volunteered information (as captured
on the videotape) about "massive scars," pointing to his
legs. However the officer merely cut him off and said "Do the
best you can."
After
T.K. finished the field sobriety checks, the officer placed him
under arrest and took him to the jail. A state administered breath
test, one hour after the arrest showed that T.K. had a blood alcohol
content of 0.089. The legal limit at the time of this arrest was
0.10 grams. At trial, the arresting officer testified that he failed
to comply with his NHTSA training by not determining if T.K. was
a good candidate for testing. In fact, T.K. voluntarily told the
officer about the two surgeries he had undergone on his left leg
due to catastrophic injuries. Despite this, the officer told him
to "use his good leg" and "do the best he could."
T.K.
performed well on the one leg stand test, standing on his uninjured
leg. Under a hypercritical evaluation by the officer, he scored
4 out of 8 clues on the walk and turn test. The only test he did
not perform well on was the horizontal gaze nystagmus. However,
our field sobriety test expert testified that T.K. suffered from
permanent nystagmus as a result of prior injuries to his head and
spine. One of T.K.'s friends also testified regarding T.K.'s prior
racing injuries and his compromised physical condition.
After
hearing all of the evidence, the jury deliberated for only 19 minutes
before returning a verdict of not guilty. The prosecutor had dropped
all the other charges in an effort to get her jury to convict of
the only remaining count.
You can
read other cases by clicking below
Get a
Free Evaluation of your drunk
driving case Now
|