SUMMARY
OF
GEORGIA’S DUI LAW
Arrests
July 1, 2001 or After
© 1996-2001
William C. Head
By:
William C. Head, Esq.
Building 5
750 Hammond Dr.
Atlanta, GA 30328-5532
(404) 250-1113
facsimile: (404) 250-1494
email: wchead@ga-drunkdrivinglawyer.com
website:
www.ga-drunkdrivinglawyer.com
GENERAL
INFORMATION: Substantial, significant changes in Georgia’s laws
went into effect on April 21, 1995, August 18, 1995, July 1, 1996,
September 1, 1996, July 1, 1997, March 27, 1998, May 1, 1999, May
1, 2000, and July 1, 2001. Other major changes occurred in each
of the previous seven (7) years. This summary provides information
for drivers arrested July 1, 2001, and after. [See
the charts accompanying this summary of Georgia law for comparable
penalties for arrests made prior to July 1, 2001.]
This Summary of Georgia DUI law only pertains to the criminal
offense of DUI. Any administrative (non-criminal) license
suspension penalties are covered in the
section on administrative suspensions. As a general rule, if
a person age 21 and over suffers an administrative license "suspension"
penalty under Georgia’s administrative suspension statute,
credit for time under suspension is given for any later license
suspension that may result from a conviction on criminal
charges. The new "revocation" rules for persons under age 21 at
the time of arrest will not permit similar treatment for these drivers.
This Summary
also covers the JUDICIAL penalties for the criminal offense
of DUI. Many other non-judicial penalties will inevitably
follow a DUI nolo contendere plea, guilty plea or conviction.
These can include increased insurance cost (or cancellation of coverage),
inability to rent cars, restrictions on travel to other countries,
loss of security clearance, job barriers, possible loss of professional
credentials or certifications, etc. These non-judicial or
economic penalties are not addressed in this Summary. At
your FREE interview, these issues will be addressed.
In two different
ways, Georgia law permits prosecution of persons who are DUI-alcohol:
TWO TYPES OF
DUI-ALCOHOL: In a "traditional" DUI case, the State must
prove that the driver was a less safe driver as a result
of alcohol consumed. This type of case can be pursued even if
no alcohol content test result exists from a blood, breath or
urine test. A test result would not exist, for example, when
a person had refused testing. Whenever a person has taken a
blood, breath, or urine test, the State also will attempt to
introduce evidence of the quantitative result. To "help" the
prosecutor prove "less safe" driving, the legislature passed
a law that permits a prosecutor to benefit from certain "legal"
inferences about any alcohol "level" if proven in court. Under
prior law (before July 1, 2001) a blood alcohol level of 0.08%
or higher was the level of "inferred" impairment for all drivers.
A change in the wording of the law appears to have eliminated
that “inference,” which gave the prosecutor an advantage at
trial. Georgia law also sets forth other "inferences" in the
law, including the fact that persons who have a blood alcohol
level of .05 or under are inferred (presumed) to NOT
be impaired by alcohol. However, the State can attempt to refute
that inference ("presumption") of non-impairment by other proof
(e.g., a collision, atrocious driving, disregard for the safety
of others, slurred speech, etc.). If a person is 0.06 or 0.07,
neither the driver nor the prosecutor is given the benefit
of an "inference." In other words, "the BAC number" does not
receive a legislated "inference" for EITHER side.
The second way that the State may attempt to prove some
DUI cases [where there is a chemical sobriety test result (blood,
breath or urine) over the applicable legal limit] is known by
lawyers as the "per se" DUI-alcohol offense. It would
be more accurate to call this driving with an unlawful blood
alcohol level. To prove this type of DUI-alcohol, the State
does not need to prove any "less safe" driving or any "drunken"
condition. The offense is committed simply by having an unlawful
blood alcohol level and "operating" an automobile. For persons
charged under paragraph 5 of subsection "a" of the DUI law (the
adult standard), the prohibited "level" is 0.08 grams %
or more. Before July 1, 2001, the adult standard was 0.10
grams % or more. For persons charged under subsection "k" (for
drivers under age 21 at the time of the arrest who take a blood
or breath alcohol test), the "per se" limit is now only
0.02 grams % (as little as one drink). For persons charged
under subsection "i" of the DUI code (for persons driving a
commercial vehicle who take a blood or breath alcohol test),
the "per se" level is 0.04 grams %. For all "per
se" calculations, the State is allowed to use a test
taken by police within three (3) hours of driving, when the
alcohol in the person’s system was consumed BEFORE the driving
ended. |
Hence,
when there is a blood, breath or urine test result "in evidence,"
there are two separate ways that the State may seek to prove
a DUI case: (1) by proving less safe driving ability, utilizing
a test result, if available (and the inferences discussed above)
or proceeding on other evidence in the case, such as driving
conduct, field sobriety tests, smell of alcohol, etc., or (2) by
proving that the person was driving with an unlawful blood alcohol
level. This method of proving DUI-alcohol requires a blood,
breath or urine test. In refusal cases, the State usually
can only pursue and prove a "less safe" DUI-alcohol case since no
chemical test result is available to prove the blood alcohol level.
A DUI
Conviction is Forever
A DUI conviction
or plea of "guilty" or nolo contendere will
be a permanent part of your driving record and your criminal history.
It does not "come off" your record after five (5) years... it
never comes off your record. Moreover, a conviction, guilty
plea or nolo contendere plea is reported to the Georgia
Department of Public Safety, which in turn, reports it to the
National Driver’s License Registry. These computer records are
accessible to driver’s licensing agencies nationwide. This is why
fighting a DUI case is so important to so many persons charged with
this offense.
Special Note to Non-Resident Licensees (Persons Licensed by a
State Other than GEORGIA)
Any
non-resident driver’s home state driver’s license agency (DMV,
DPS, etc.) will receive a notice from the Georgia Department of
Public Safety if any license suspension or case disposition (conviction
or nolo contendere plea) occurs in Georgia and the non-resident
license is involved. In almost all cases, a nolo plea or
a guilty plea or guilty verdict in a criminal case for DUI
in the State of Georgia will cause a suspension to occur in the
non-resident’s home state. A "not guilty" verdict or other
non-DUI disposition of the case through pre-trial negotiations by
your attorney will prevent such consequences. Often, an administrative
license suspension (which typically occurs before the criminal case
is heard) will not cause a suspension of privileges in the
non-resident driver’s home state.
Legal
Limits of Alcohol Concentration – Three Different Standards
An alcohol
content reading of 0.02 BAC is the level for per se (unlawful
alcohol level) intoxication for persons under the age of 21
at the time of arrest who are accused of violating subsection "k"
of the DUI code. This means that if you are under 21 years of age
and submitted to the state’s test and the result was 0.020 or higher,
you may be accused of driving with an unlawful blood alcohol level
under subsection "k" plus be accused of "DUI - Less Safe" under
paragraph 1 of subsection "a," based on other evidence (including
manifestations of impairment, driving conduct, or other evidence).
An alcohol content reading of 0.04 BAC is the level for per
se (unlawful alcohol level) intoxication for persons accused
under subsection "i" of the DUI code that were stopped while
operating a commercial vehicle. This means that if you submitted
to the state’s test and the result was 0.04 or higher, you may be
accused of driving a commercial vehicle while having an unlawful
blood alcohol level. If a driver is stopped in a commercial vehicle
and the State’s test reveals ANY alcohol, a 24-hour out-of-service
order will be issued, and the truck will be impounded until said
time period is over.
An alcohol content reading of 0.08 is the level for per se
(unlawful alcohol level) intoxication for persons who are age
21 and older and accused of violating subsection 40-6-391(a)(5)
of Georgia law. The prosecutor, however, must be able to prove that
the test given was a valid test, and that it was taken within three
(3) hours of driving or being in actual physical control of a vehicle,
from alcohol consumed PRIOR TO the driving of the vehicle ended.
This means that if you submit to testing and yield a result
over 0.079, you will be accused of driving with an unlawful
blood alcohol level under subsection "(a)(5)." No evidence of
"bad driving" or visible signs or manifestations of impairment is
REQUIRED to obtain a conviction for this type of DUI.
DUI –
"drugs" and DUI – "alcohol and drugs"
Other than
the two methods of proving DUI-alcohol for the various "types" of
vehicles or drivers, Georgia law also provides for prosecution of
other types of "impaired" driving. A person can be prosecuted for
driving under the influence of alcohol and drugs, or
drugs (prescribed or non-prescribed), or DUI contraband
(illegal) drugs such as marijuana or cocaine. If the person is accused
of being DUI by multiple “substances” (example: alcohol in one “count”
and drugs in a different “count”), the jury (or judge --- if a non-jury
trial) can convict on both and two sentences can
be imposed.
DUI –
"toxic vapors"
Since July
1, 1996, Georgia has had a new type of DUI: DUI toxic vapors
(from common substances such as paint thinner, lacquer, varnish,
etc.). This type of intoxication requires proof of INTENT to inhale
these vapors. Hence, occupational "intoxication" may result in prosecution
for DUI "toxic fumes." [NOTE: a BREATH testing device cannot accurately
measure these vapors. A blood test is the only approved type of
implied-consent test presently available to quantify the toxicity
and effects of such vapors.]
Depending
on the type of evidence available (i.e., from a blood test), a prosecutor
can proceed on any or all of these "types" of DUI. One type
of DUI allows any combined impairment from any two of the prohibited
chemicals: (1) alcohol, (2) drugs, or (3) toxic vapors.
What
Does the Five-Year "Look-back" Period Relate to?
"Repeat
offender" status for MANDATORY increased minimum punishment in DUI
cases is determined in Georgia-based upon a five-year "look-back"
period. This status is used for purposes of increased mandatory
minimum punishment. This "look-back" period has nothing to do with
how long a DUI remains on your record. In deciding the extent to
which a repeat offender should be punished, most judges will look
at a person’s lifetime record, not just the five-year "look-back"
period. Also, Georgia law requires out-of-state convictions to be
considered as “priors,” in the same manner as Georgia convictions.
The last pages of this Summary are GRIDs that set out in handy charts
the MANDATORY MINIMUM punishment for DUI cases in which the arrest
was made on July 1, 2001, and after. A side-by-side comparison to
prior law is also shown in these three pages (for arrests occurring
before July 1, 2001).
Whenever
the five-year "look-back" period is discussed herein, the method
of counting is as follows:
1)
take the DATE OF ARREST for the previous DUI offense (not
the disposition or plea date);
2) the prior DUI "counts" against you, whether it was disposed
of as a plea of guilty, or with a trial that resulted in a "guilty"
verdict or where a nolo contendere plea was ultimately
accepted; and
3) take the DATE OF ARREST in the current case,
and determine if more than five full years have expired.
Due to the
SEVERE increased punishment for repeat offenses within the five-year
“look-back” period, obtain precise dates of any prior drunk driving
convictions before your initial visit to our office.
A bad
record can come back to haunt a person facing a current DUI charge.
Remember that a judge can ignore (and many do) the
five-year “look-back" period and review your ENTIRE record for purposes
of:
a)
increasing your punishment (up to the maximum penalties set by
law) over that punishment which he/she would give another person
with no prior record;
b) at your trial, allowing the prosecutor (in some instances,
after notice and a pre-trial hearing) to introduce evidence
of prior instances where you were convicted of driving while impaired,
or even plead guilty or nolo contendere to a driving under
the influence charge. The prosecutor may attempt to bring in evidence
from any DUI case, even those cases greater than five
years old and those from other states. This is called
"introducing evidence of similar transactions." Some
judges will not readily admit similar transaction evidence from
other DUI cases, due to its tremendous prejudicial harm
to the current case. Other judges routinely permit prior transaction
evidence into the current case; and
c) not allowing a nolo contendere plea even where
otherwise eligible for this special plea (a valuable right, for
civil damages consequences, if an accident has occurred).
The counting
of "first," "second," etc., relates to which offense this is within
the five-year "look-back" period. This determines minimum punishment
that must be assessed if a guilty verdict or plea is entered, or
(if available) upon entry of a nolo contendere plea.
| SPECIAL NOTE FOR
ANY CONVICTION OF DUI OR PLEA OF GUILTY OR NOLO CONTENDERE:
The sentencing court has broad powers at sentencing insofar
as whether to grant "probation," rather than put the person
convicted in jail. Furthermore, if probation is granted (in
lieu of jail time), the conditions of probation can be extremely
onerous and restrictive. Moreover, all jurisdictions charge
monthly "supervision" fees so that the person pays for his/her
probationary sentence. Georgia law requires that the balance
of 12 months of probation (deducting for any jail time imposed)
on every DUI conviction. The judge imposing the sentence can
require “reporting” or “non-reporting” probation after other
conditions of the sentence are met. This can not only lower
total costs (most non-reporting months are not assessed a supervision
fee), but can eliminate time-consuming visits or call to a probation
officer. Caution: Even non-reporting probation --- if
violated --- can result in a revocation of all or part of the
remaining term of probation. This means being put in jail, or
some alternative form of incarceration (examples: work-release
confinement, home confinement, alcohol and drug residential
facility). The length of supervised probation is optional with
the judge, up to the length of the maximum amount of jail time,
minus any days spent in jail. |
DUI First offense: Considered to be a "Simple Misdemeanor" under
Georgia law
[NOTE:
No person who has had a prior nolo contendere plea or
guilty plea or verdict within the five-year "look-back" period
is eligible to receive the benefits of a nolo contendere plea.
A nolo plea is unavailable for persons arrested July 1,
1997 or after who take a State test and have a result higher
than 0.15%. Also, drivers under age 21 at the time of arrest are
completely ineligible for "nolo" treatment.]
-
Fine:
$300-$1,000 (plus statutory surcharges, fees and assessments
which can add 20% to 25% to the fine amount).
-
Jail:
10 days to 12 months (all jail time but 24 hours of the sentence
may be suspended, stayed, or probated). The only persons
who may avoid the 24 hour mandatory jail sentence are first
offenders who had a chemical test (blood, breath, or urine)
of less than 0.08 grams %. The new law will be applied by each
judge, and therefore, a person who refused testing may be
eligible for (but not necessarily ENTITLED to) a "no jail
time" sentence. All others who are convicted must go to jail.
Drivers under age 21 convicted of a first offense under subsection
"k" may be allowed to serve their sentence on weekends or during
their non-working hours and they must be segregated from the
general jail population. This separation from other prisoners
applies to the first offense only.
-
Community
Service: A minimum of 40 Hours of Community Service is MANDATED,
but persons under 21 with a first offense under subsection "k"
of the DUI code and who have a BAC level of less than
0.08 grams % must perform not less than 20 hours. The exact
number of hours is set by the sentencing judge. Some courts
prefer that community service hours be completed before
a plea is taken.
-
Probation:
12 months, less any days of actual incarceration, if the
defendant is sentenced to less than 12 months imprisonment.
-
Risk
Reduction Program (DUI Driving School): Mandatory participation
in a 20-hour program approved by the Department of Human Resources
at an approximate program fee of $175 plus an assessment fee
of $75. [The minimum class enrollment hours changed to 20 hours
for all cases arising May 1, 1999 and after.]
-
License
Suspension: For those 21 and over when arrested, a one-year
suspension, but a "work permit" is available to first offender
adults if the driver has a Georgia license. After 120
days and completion of the DUI driving school course, application
for reinstatement by drivers 21 and older is possible. Therefore,
120 days after conviction, adult first-offenders may apply to
the Department of Public Safety for possible early reinstatement
of his or her license by submitting proof of completion of the
Risk Reduction Program and paying a reinstatement fee in the
amount of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in).
Can
I Plead "Nolo Contendere"?
The eligibility rules for the use of a nolo plea for non-residents
are now the same as for residents. A nolo contendere plea
will not "save" a Georgia license for any arrests made July 1, 1997
or after. The individual judge decides whether he/she will accept
a nolo plea. Any person who has a BAC test of over 0.15
cannot plead nolo. Any person under age 21 who was stopped
July 1, 1997 or after and charged with DUI is totally ineligible.
Before July 1, 1997, drivers under age 18 were ineligible. In addition,
for persons licensed by a state other than Georgia, a nolo contendere
plea generally will not "save" your license, absent some special
law in your home state that permits this. Upon receiving a report
of a DUI conviction in Georgia, the home state will routinely suspend
or revoke the person’s license in their home state. So, a nolo
contendere plea for licensees of states other than Georgia is
generally no better than a guilty verdict at trial, or a plea of
guilty. This puts a premium on winning the case, or obtaining a
non-DUI disposition through negotiations with the prosecutor.
A plea of
nolo contendere is always discretionary (optional) with
the judge handling the case. It is often unavailable in
the event of a refusal to submit to a chemical sobriety
test at the time of arrest since many judges will not accept a
nolo for "refusal" cases. A nolo is also unavailable
to any person who has had a prior guilty plea or verdict or a prior
plea of nolo contendere to DUI in the past five (5) years.
The DUI bill which became effective July 1, 1997, eliminated
the "license saving" aspect of the nolo plea which many
Georgians previously sought. Now, even if a nolo plea
is accepted for "civil" liability reasons, a Georgia driver’s license
(or entire privilege to drive in Georgia, for non-resident licensees)
will be lost.
The Judge
May Always Refuse to Allow "Nolo" Treatment
Most judges
now require a copy of your lifetime driving record. In addition,
many judges want to know your record in prior states of residence.
Even one prior DUI will cause some judges to deny nolo treatment.
Sometimes a bad driving history (with no prior DUIs) will cause
a judge to deny this plea alternative and will cause the judge to
punish more severely.
IN SUMMARY,
OFFENDERS WITH A BAC OF .15 OR MORE CANNOT PLEAD NOLO. NOLO TREATMENT
IS ALWAYS OPTIONAL WITH THE JUDGE, BUT CANNOT BE PERMITTED FOR A
PERSON WHO HAS A PRIOR DUI WITHIN FIVE (5) YEARS. FURTHERMORE, LICENSE
SUSPENSION (OR REVOCATION FOR DRIVERS UNDER 21) IS MANDATORY. FOR
DRIVERS UNDER 21 AT THE TIME OF ARREST, A NOLO CONTENDERE PLEA IS
UNAVAILABLE. FINALLY, AFTER JULY 1, 1997 THE "LICENSE SAVING" ASPECTS
OF A NOLO PLEA NO LONGER EXIST.
Special License Revocation Rules for Underage Drivers
The disposition
of the offender’s license (if convicted) is dependent on the person’s
age. Persons under 21 suffer a "revocation" of their license, if
arrested prior to July 1, 2001. Drivers under 21 (arrested prior
to July 1, 2001) who have a DUI conviction will be revoked for either
six (6) or 12 months, and have NO PERMIT WHATSOEVER. This revocation
period is usually for 12 months, but can be for six (6) months for
persons under 21 with a first DUI offense and a BAC under 0.08 grams
%.
The 2001
legislative changes altered the law relating to drivers under 21
in only one respect: the “revocation” was changed to a “suspension.”
From a practical perspective, this change prevented drivers from
having to start over with all driver’s license applications, testing,
etc., as is required with any revocation. The license bureaus will
be relieved of this needless, extra work. For all other purposes,
the under 21 driver cannot drive for either six (6) months or 12
months, and receives no “work permit.” A "revocation" differs from
a "suspension" in that a revocation totally voids all driving privileges
plus totally eradicates a Georgia license. A person
under 21 who is "revoked" (applicable to arrests made prior to July
1, 2001) must start completely over with the entire Georgia driver’s
license process, eye exam, driving test, etc.
The change
in 2001 (applicable to all cases disposed of July 1, 2001, or later),
permits this to be a suspension, or an “interruption” of driving
privileges for six (6) to 12 months. The revocation (or suspension,
for arrests July 1, 2001, and after) will not be lifted until proof
of completion of the Risk Reduction Program is received and a reinstatement
fee in the amount of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in) is paid. Then,
the suspended driver must complete driving school (risk reduction)
and pay the required reinstatement fees. The obligation of filing
this paperwork in a timely and complete manner is on the licensee.
No driving may occur --- ever --- until reinstatement
has been achieved.
DUI Second
Offense/Guilty Plea or Being Found Guilty at Trial (Simple Misdemeanor)
-
Fine:
$600-$1,000 (plus statutory surcharges, fees and assessments,
which typically adds 20% to 30% to the fine amount).
-
Jail:
90 days to 12 months. All but 72 continuous hours of jail time
may be suspended, stayed or probated. Seventy-two (72)
continuous hours in jail is MANDATED. However, a few judges
will consider (in the right case and with the right
witnesses and proof) permitting all or part of the court-ordered
"jail" time to be served at either (a) a halfway house (where
treatment for alcohol or drugs is available) or "work release"
program; (b) a "detention" drug/alcohol treatment [in-house]
facility; or (c) by way of "home detention," whereby you must
be at home and respond to monitoring and testing whenever you
are not at work, treatment, etc. The judge decides whether this
will be an alternative sentence available to you, for all or
part of your sentence, and (if so) he/she may set the rules
of when you must be at home. If available, any alternative to
traditional jail time is a matter of planning by the attorney
and client, and is usually subject to "negotiations" between
the prosecutor and the defense attorney which are later implemented
by the judge into a formal, written order or "sentence." The
remainder of the sentence may be suspended, stayed or probated—at
the judge’s discretion. Persons under 21 convicted for a second
offense within five years under code sections ("a," "i," or
"k") have no statutory protection that requires segregation
from the general jail population, where a repeat offense exists.
-
Community
Service: Not less than thirty (30) days of Community
Service is MANDATED in all cases.
-
Probation:
12 months of probation, less any days of actual incarceration
if the defendant is sentenced to less than 12 months imprisonment.
-
Mandatory
Alcohol and Drug Assessment and Treatment (if dictated by the
assessment): Every repeat offender undergoes a clinical
evaluation and must follow all treatment recommendations. Also,
every repeat offender must participate in a 20-hour Risk Reduction
program approved by the Department of Human Resources at a program
fee of approximately $175 plus an assessment fee of roughly
$75.
-
License
Suspension: For adults convicted under subsection "a," a
three-year suspension. Not even limited driving privileges can
be reinstated for 12 months. For persons under age 21 convicted
under subsection "k," an 18-month suspension of license applies
to all offenders, with no work permit at all and no chance for
ignition interlock during this 18-month period. All offenders
(those over 21 or under 21) must also be completely finished
with all alcohol and drug treatment before they can qualify
for return of the plastic license. However, unless all alcohol
and drug treatment is completed, no license can be reinstated,
but a limited “work permit” may be available. Therefore, 12
months after conviction, "adult" offenders may apply to the
Department of Public Safety for restricted driving privileges
by submitting proof of completion of the Risk Reduction Program,
plus proof of completion of alcohol and drug treatment, and
paying a reinstatement fee in the amount of $200 (mail-in) or
$210 (walk-in). Then for not less than six (6) months,
all of the offender’s vehicles (if used for personal
use or work) must be fitted with an ignition interlock device
which prevents the car from running when the driver’s breath
has any alcohol on it.
-
Photo
Published in Newspaper: In conjunction with a second or
subsequent conviction, a notice of conviction will be published
in the local newspaper including:
-
Photograph
of offender taken at time of arrest;
-
Name
and address of offender is given; and
-
Date,
time, place of arrest and disposition of the case.
-
The
offender is assessed an additional $25 fee to be paid to the
Clerk of Court at sentencing to cover the cost publishing
the photograph in the local newspaper ("the legal organ").
-
The
size of the photo and written notice that accompanies it is
one column wide by two inches high.
[NOTE:
This "photo publication" punishment is applicable to second or
subsequent offenders whose new arrest occurs on or after May 1,
1999.]
-
Ignition
Interlock Devices (Mandatory): For all second and subsequent
offenders in a five-year period, a court will order the installation
of ignition interlock device for a six-month (or longer) period.
The judge can either order an ignition interlock device 12 months
after the conviction; or rule that the offender is not eligible
for an ignition interlock device which means that the offender's
license will be suspended for the full 18 months with no limited
permit. The cost of installation and maintenance of an interlock
device is paid by the offender. The device prevents an offender
from starting his/her vehicle without first blowing into a breath
tube. The device "sounds" an alarm periodically while the vehicle
is running, and the offender must blow into the device again.
Otherwise, the vehicle stops. This device prevents any driving
after consuming alcohol. The device has a computer database
that will later be downloaded and will indicate when any “positive”
alcohol readings were obtained. This may lead to full license
suspension for the entire three (3) years, and could result
in a revocation of probation.
[NOTE:
Georgia’s appellate courts have not ruled on whether this "ignition
interlock" punishment is retroactive, or only applicable to cases
made July 1, 2001, and after. Some judges are adding an ignition
interlock requirement to ALL convictions, by judicial
decree --- including FIRST offenders.]
-
License
Plate Confiscation: The new 2001 legislation, applicable
to ALL second offenders (using five-year “look-back”) requires
the court handling the case to confiscate ALL license plates
for ALL vehicles in the convicted person’s name. This includes
co-owned vehicles. Limited provisions exist whereby a co-owner
or family member may seek to use the car, but a motion must
be filed and a hearing must be held. If hardship is granted,
a special “DUI” tag is issued.
DUI Third
Offense/Guilty Plea or Being Found Guilty at Trial (High and Aggravated
Misdemeanor)
-
Fine:
$1,000-$5,000 (plus statutory surcharges and assessments, which
typically adds 20% to 30% to the fine amount). For third offenders,
special provisions exist for "economic hardship" cases, whereby
a judge can reduce fines by half (conditioned upon the offender
undergoing an alcohol or drug treatment program). In addition,
the judge can set up an "installment" payment for fines and
court costs.
-
Jail:
For third offenders, 120 days to 12 months. All but 15 days
of “actual detention” may be suspended, stayed or probated.
Fifteen (15) days in jail is MANDATED. However, a few judges
may consider [in the right case and with the right
witnesses (e.g., alcohol rehabilitation counselors) and other
proof] permitting all or part of the court-ordered "jail" time
to be served at either (a) a halfway house (where treatment
for alcohol or drugs is available) or “work release” program;
(b) in a “detention” drug/alcohol treatment [in-house] facility;
or (c) by way of "house detention," whereby you must be at home
and respond to monitoring and testing whenever you are not at
work, treatment, etc. The judge decides whether this will be
an alternative sentence available to you, or all or part of
your sentence, and (if so) he/she may set the rules of when
you must be at home. If available, any alternative to traditional
jail time is a matter of planning by the attorney and client,
and is usually subject to "negotiations" between the prosecutor
and the defense attorney which are later implemented by the
judge into a formal, written order or "sentence." The remainder
of the sentence may be suspended, stayed or probated—at the
judge’s discretion. Persons under 21 convicted under code sections
("a," "i," or "k") have no statutory protection that requires
segregation from the general jail population, where a repeat
offense exists.
-
Community
Service: Not less than 30 days of Community Service
is MANDATED. Some judges translate "days" to mean 30 eight-hour
workdays (240 hours) while one or two translate this into 30
24-hour days (720 hours) of "service."
-
Probation:
12 months, less any days of actual incarceration, if the
defendant is sentenced to less than 12 months imprisonment.
-
Mandatory
Alcohol and Drug Assessment and Treatment: Every repeat
offender undergoes a clinical evaluation and must follow all
treatment recommendations. Also, every repeat offender must
participate in a 20-hour Risk Reduction program approved by
the Department of Human Resources at a program fee of $175 plus
an assessment fee of $75.
-
License
Revocation: Five-year license revocation, and the
offender is declared a “Habitual Violator.” Adult offenders
may apply for a probationary license after two (2) years
of the five-year revocation period provided that stringent reinstatement
requirements are met. Included in these requirements is mandatory
installation and maintenance of an ignition interlock device
at the owner’s expense. This will be for a minimum of six (6)
months. Offenders should contact the Department of Public Safety
for specific requirements, or ask his/her legal counsel. Persons
under 21 are also revoked for five (5) years and are eligible
for the ignition interlock device after 24 months. They must
wait the full 30 months before seeking a “probationary” license.
All other conditions for reinstatement must be met, too (e.g.
drug and alcohol treatment, risk reduction school, etc.).
-
Photo
Published in Newspaper: In conjunction with a second or
subsequent conviction, a notice of conviction will be published
in the local newspaper including:
-
Photograph
of offender taken at time of arrest;
-
Name
and address of offender is given; and
-
Date,
time, place of arrest and disposition of the case.
-
The
offender is assessed an additional $25 fee to be paid to the
Clerk of Court to cover the cost publishing the photograph
in the local newspaper ("the legal organ").
-
The
size of the photo and written notice that accompanies it is
one column wide by two inches high.
[NOTE:
This rule has been applicable to third offenders within a five-year
period for several years, and applies in all cases.]
-
Ignition
Interlock Devices (Mandatory): A court will order the installation
of an ignition interlock device for a six month (or longer)
period. The ignition interlock permit begins when the adult
offender obtains his/her probationary license (two years after
the conviction). No person under age 21 at the time of conviction
can take advantage of using early reinstatement and installation
of the ignition interlock device. He or she must wait 30 full
months. After the expiration of the six-month ignition interlock
period, the adult offender may apply for a habitual violator
probationary license without an ignition interlock device condition.
The cost of installation of an interlock device is paid by the
offender. The device prevents an offender from starting his/her
vehicle without first blowing into a breath tube. The device
"sounds" an alarm periodically while the vehicle is running,
and the offender must blow into the device again. Otherwise,
the vehicle stops. This device prevents any driving after consuming
alcohol. The device has a computer database that will later
be downloaded and will indicate when any “positive” alcohol
readings were obtained. This may lead to full license suspension
for the entire three (3) years, and could result in a revocation
of probation.
[SPECIAL
NOTE: The new ignition interlock law [applicable to second or
subsequent DUI offenses within five (5) years] went into effect
May 1, 2000, and was amended July 1, 2001. It applies to repeat
DUI offenses which occur within a five-year period. Another existing
law, however, mandates that if a person is convicted of a THIRD
OFFENSE in five years, the person’s license is
revoked for five years. The limited permit (called
a “probationary license”) is not automatically available to adult
third offenders. Certain “verifications” from the driver are required
and “hardship” must be shown.]
[NOTE:
Georgia’s appellate courts have not ruled on whether this punishment
is retroactive, or only applicable to cases made July 1, 2001,
and after. Some judges are adding an ignition interlock requirement
to ALL convictions --- including FIRST offenders --- by judicial
decree.]
-
License
Plates Confiscated (Mandatory): If the vehicle in which
the DUI arrest was made was titled in the offender’s name, its
tag will be confiscated and turned in to the local tag office
along with any other vehicle tags belonging wholly or partially
by offender. If the offender was driving a vehicle owned by
someone else, tags belonging to all of the vehicles
owned or co-owned by the offender will be "sanctioned and confiscated."
Sale or transfer of any "sanctioned" vehicle(s) will be done
only with the approval of the State Revenue Commissioner, after
proper application and hearing.
| SPECIAL CAUTION:
UPON A FOURTH CONVICTION WITHIN FIVE YEARS, HABITUAL VIOLATORS
CAUGHT DRIVING ANY VEHICLE --- DRUNK OR NOT --- CAN HAVE THEIR
MOTOR VEHICLE SEIZED BY THE STATE AND SOLD (FORFEITED). ADDITIONALLY,
SUCH CONDUCT TYPICALLY WOULD BE CHARGED AS A FELONY OFFENSE. |
Drug
Offenses and DUI-Contraband
While
a DUI offense involving drugs may be prosecuted by the State even
where the drugs are prescribed by a physician, special rules apply
to DUI-contraband cases. These cases involve illegal substances
(marijuana, cocaine, heroine, etc.) in the driver’s blood system.
The DUI offense here is based upon driving while having an unlawful
substance in your blood system. Although this issue is currently
on appeal, the prosecutor is not currently required to prove
impairment caused by the illegal contraband drugs in your
system. Mere proof of the presence of a contraband substance or
its "metabolites" is sufficient to render a conviction. However,
recent case law (Love v. State) holds that if a person
has marijuana present in his/her system, the State must prove
that the person was rendered incapable of driving safely as a
result of using the marijuana. This is true because someone could
legally have traces of marijuana in his or her bloodstream (e.g.
coming into Georgia on a flight from Amsterdam where use of marijuana
is legal), so that the law is overly broad in its scope.
Beyond
the misdemeanor DUI-contraband penalties set forth above, Georgia
law has other more punitive statutes for possession of
drugs when marijuana or other drugs are found in a vehicle or
someone’s pocket. A "possession" offense may be committed by a
person driving a car, or by a person not operating a car. Other
drugs are often found in the person’s pockets or in the vehicle.
As covered hereafter, your driver’s license can and will be suspended
upon a guilty plea or a conviction for possession of drugs,
EVEN IF you were not driving when arrested. This law has been
upheld by the Georgia Supreme Court after an appeal on challenges
to its constitutionality.
First
Conviction on Possession of Controlled Substance (Felony) or Marijuana
(Misdemeanor or Possible Felony depending upon if a repeat offense
and quantity)
-
Fine:
Up to $1,000 for marijuana/Court’s discretion for other controlled
substances (like heroin, cocaine, etc.).
-
Jail:
1 - 15 years depending on the substance.
-
Community
Service: Up to 12 months of Community Service for possession
of marijuana.
-
License
Suspension: 180-day minimum. 181 days after conviction,
offenders may apply to the Department of Public Safety for possible
early reinstatement of driving privileges by submitting proof
of completion of a Risk Reduction Program and paying a reinstatement
fee in the amount of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in). No "work"
permit whatsoever is allowed for "drug" offenders.
These
are minimum sentences for a first offense on possession
of a controlled substance. Driving a car while in possession of
these controlled substances is not an element of the offense.
In other words, the person can be standing inside a building and
be in possession of marijuana or other controlled substances and
lose driving privileges. Additional penalties may be set at the
discretion of the judge/court depending on the severity of the
offense and substance. Depending on the quantity of drugs and
whether the current charge is a first offense may determine whether
the case will be a felony or a misdemeanor.
Second
Conviction on Possession of Controlled Substance or Marijuana (Felony)
-
Fine:
At the Judge’s discretion
-
Jail:
1 - 30 years depending on the substance
-
License
Suspension: One-year minimum. Repeat offenses result in
successive (consecutive) license suspension periods. After one
year, offenders may apply to the Department of Public Safety
for possible early reinstatement of driving privileges by submitting
proof of completion of a Risk Reduction Program and paying a
reinstatement fee in the amount of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in).
No "work" permit available.
These
are minimum sentences for a second offense on possession of a
controlled substance. Additional penalties may be set at the discretion
of the judge/court depending on the severity of offense and substance.
A second offense can be disposed of as a misdemeanor, but is a
matter of negotiation for the District Attorney, defense attorney
and trial judge.
| NOTE: Upon conviction
for possession of any contraband drug, in any amount, the law
calls for a suspension of an offender’s driver’s license
regardless of whether the offender was operating a motor
vehicle at the time of arrest. |
Any conviction
of DUI or possession of marijuana or other controlled substance
requires mandatory participation in the Risk Reduction Program in
order to apply to the Department of Public Safety for possible reinstatement
of driver’s license. Suspensions will not "age off," so as to automatically
entitle you to drive once again. Application must be made, and fees
paid before driving privileges will be restored. Under certain conditions,
a “nolo contendere” plea or a “first offender” plea may
save a person’s right to drive. Each case must be evaluated on a
case-by-case basis.
DRIVING
WHILE YOUR LICENSE IS SUSPENDED
First
Offense Driving on a Suspended License (Simple Misdemeanor)
The penalty
for a first offense of driving on a suspended license is not
less than two (2) days nor more than 12 months imprisonment
and the fine is not less than $500 or more than $1,000. The Department
of Public Safety will automatically suspend the driver’s license
for an additional six (6) months (from date of conviction) or plea
of nolo contendere with no "work permit" available. Upon conviction,
any suspension called for here is ADDED ON to other existing suspension
periods. No reinstatement fee is required, however, and this suspension
may "age off."
Second or Subsequent Offense (within 5 years) for Driving on
a Suspended License (High and Aggravated Misdemeanor)
The penalty
for a second offense of driving on a suspended license is a “high
and aggravated” misdemeanor, requiring imprisonment for not
less than 10 days nor more than 12 months and the fine is not
less than $1,000 or more than $2,500. The Department of Public Safety
will automatically suspend the driver’s license for six (6) months
(from date of conviction) with no "work permit" available. Upon
conviction, any suspension called for here is ADDED ON to other
existing suspension periods.
Georgia
Law Regarding Underage (under 21) Drinking While Driving (Simple
Misdemeanor)
Persons
under the age of 21 who are convicted of being in possession of
alcohol while operating a motor vehicle have a mandatory 120-day
driver’s license suspension and must attend the Risk Reduction Program
and pay a reinstatement fee of $25 (mail-in) or $35 (walk-in). No
work permit is available and no early reinstatement.
Underage
(under 21) Possession of Alcohol - Even if NOT Driving
Possession
of alcohol is a misdemeanor with up to six (6) months jail time
or up to a $300 fine. Also, the offender’s driver’s license is suspended
for six (6) months. However, the judge has the option to place the
offender on probation for up to three (3) years in order for the
offender to undergo a comprehensive alcohol rehabilitation program.
The court may also order that the offender complete the Risk Reduction
Program within 120 days. Failure to complete the Program is punishable
by a $300 fine, 20 days in jail, or both. Furthermore, a special
statue allows for a possible “conditional discharge” upon completion
of a court-ordered plan of fines, community service and possible
drug and alcohol counseling. If granted, and if the entire program
is completed without new violations occurring, no “conviction” will
appear on the person’s record.
Juveniles
under age of 16 who have a FIRST offense of DUI
In addition
to the other first offense DUI penalties listed above, a child under
16 years of age shall have his privilege to apply for and
be issued a driver’s license or learner’s permit suspended until
the child is 17 years old and will have to attend the Risk
Reduction Program or court approved juvenile program and pay a reinstatement
fee of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in).
Juveniles
under age of 16 who have a SECOND offense of DUI
In addition
to the other second offense DUI penalties listed above, a child
under 16 years of age shall have his privilege to apply for
and be issued a driver’s license or learner’s permit suspended until
the child is 18 years old and will have to attend the Risk
Reduction Program or court approved juvenile program and pay a reinstatement
fee of $200 (mail-in) or $210 (walk-in). In practical terms, the
soonest any form of “application” could occur is 18 months after
conviction.
An Open
Container of Alcoholic Beverage...
...will
be considered in the possession of the driver if it is not
locked outside of the passenger compartment (trunk/glove compartment).
This law changed July 1, 2001. Prior to that date, a passenger could
possess an alcoholic beverage in the car. The driver can be fined
up to $200 and receive two (2) points on his or her driver’s license.
The 2001 legislation permits limo drivers and “vehicles for hire”
to have passengers with alcoholic beverages, however. Note that
any driver under 21 may be dealt with more harshly, as stated above.
Summary of Georgia's
Administrative License Suspension Laws
This
written material is copyrighted by William C. Head, and is intended
for use and distribution only under license agreement with William
C. Head. No copying or reproduction of this material is permitted
in any form or fashion without written permission from William C.
Head.
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