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Below are Tips to Avoid Being Convicted of DUI-Driving Under the Influence, and saving your driving privileges in Palm Springs, California:
1. Don't
drink and drive!
If you have been drinking, call a taxi or have a friend
drive you home
2. Always drive safely.
Most DUI stops are for traffic violations such as speeding, unsafe lane changes, not driving within the lane, illegal turns, etc. Be focused and attentive while driving so that you don’t give law enforcement a reason to pull you over! Drive at the speed limit. Be sure to turn on your headlights, fasten your seatbelts, etc. Do not send text messages, do not use your cell phone, do not play with your car stereo, do not eat while driving, or do anything that will divert your attention from your driving.
3. Do Not drive though drive-thru fast food restaurants.
If the fast food restaurant workers believes you are under the influence, they will call the police. The fast food restaurant workers will use various tactics to detain you, such as “it will take a few minutes to cook your order.. can you pull around and park and we’ll bring your food out to your car.” While you are waiting, law enforcement is on the way.
And yes, the fast food restaurant took your money too!
4. Do not let
the police officer check your eyes and do not agree to take other Field
Sobriety Tests.
If you are suspected of DUI-Drunk Driving, the police officer
will usually first want to check your eyes. He will ask you to hold
your head still and follow his pen or finger with your eyes only. This
is called the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN) test which is a Field
Sobriety Test. Nystagmus is the involuntary jerking of the eyes. When
the test is administered correctly by the officer and Nystagmus is
detected, it can be an indicator that the alcohol is present in the
suspected driver’s blood. The problem is that many officers DO NOT
administer the test correctly and will often short-cut the test, but yet
the officer will write in the arrest report that he/she observed “clues”
supporting an arrest for DUI – Drunk Driving. The HGN test is nothing
more than a tool for the officer to use to gather evidence that will be
used against you. Since the HGN test is a voluntary test, it is your
right to elect NOT to participate in the test. An honest officer cannot
write that you failed a test that you elected not to do. Always be
polite, but say to the officer “on the advice of my attorney, I elect
not to participate in any filed sobriety tests.”
In addition to the HGN test, other Field Sobriety Tests often
given by police officers are: finger to nose, hand pat, finger count,
say the alphabet backwards, count backwards, one leg stand, walk the
line and turn, and what ever other crazy test the officer can come up
with.
Note that only the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus test, the One Leg
Stand test, and the Walk and Turn test are considered Standardized Field
Sobriety Tests and are approved by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) and the International Association of Chiefs of
Police (IACP) and are part of the DWI Detection Standardized Field
Sobriety Testing Program. Any other test is simply not reliable as there
are no studies supporting them
Like the HGN, all Field Sobriety Tests are completely voluntary
and you do not have to take them. Always be polite, but say to the
officer “on the advice of my attorney, I elect not to participate in any
filed sobriety tests.”
Many law enforcement officers will tell you that if you pass
the tests you won’t be arrested.
But if the officer
smells alcohol on your breath, it is very likely that you will be
arrested. Some officers will tell you that if you refuse to take the
Field Sobriety Tests, you will go to jail. Do not allow the officer to
intimidate you. If you’ve been drinking, you will likely go to jail
anyway.
Some officers will also tell you that if you refuse to take
the Field Sobriety Tests, they will tell the court and it will be
evidence that you are guilty. Field Sobriety Tests are completely
voluntary and it is your right to elect not to take the test.
By agreeing to participate in Field Sobriety Tests, you are
helping the officer gather evidence and build a case against you. You
are giving the officer the opportunity to write in his report that you
“failed” the tests. The tests are subjective and the officer’s idea of
“passing” is very different than yours. You are better off not giving
the officer “evidence” that he will use against you. Again, be polite,
but say to the officer “on the advice of my attorney, I elect not to
participate in any filed sobriety tests.”
Note: If you are on probation for a previous DUI-Drunk Driving conviction, a term of your probation may require you to submit to Field Sobriety Tests. Be sure to review your terms of probation if you are on probation for a previous DUI conviction and consult a DUI defense attorney.
5. Politely elect NOT to
answer any questions during the DUI investigation,
either before or after you are arrested. You must provide the officer
with your driver license, registration, and proof of insurance, but
other than that REMAIN
SILENT. If the
officer asks you if you have been drinking alcohol, simply say “on the
advice of my attorney, I choose to exercise my 5th amendment
right and remain silent.” It is your 5th Amendment right to remain
silent and not say anything that may incriminate you.
The officer will want to ask you questions regarding where
you’ve been, what you’ve eaten, how many alcoholic beverages you drank,
what were you drinking, when you last slept, etc.By doing so the officer
is gathering information to make a quick determination of your drinking
pattern, and with this information, the officer will determine if he/she
should test your blood alcohol level as soon as possible or wait a while
until you have fully absorbed the alcohol in your stomach. In addition,
by answering the officer’s questions you are helping the officer gather
evidence – your statements- that will be used against you in court.
Again, politely say “Officer, I choose to exercise my 5th amendment
right and remain silent.”
6. If you are age 21 or over, Decline to take the Preliminary Alcohol Screen (PAS) Breath test. After you’ve been stopped, if the officer suspects that you’ve been drinking, he/she may ask you to blow into a Preliminary Alcohol Screen Breath (PAS) device, which is a hand held device used to detect alcohol in your breath. This test is voluntary but most officers won’t tell you that. Many officers will tell you that you must blow into the PAS device. THIS IS FALSE!
If you are 21 years of age or older (If you are under 21 years of age, you must agree to take the PAS test).
Although the implied consent law
requires that you submit to a “chemical test” to measure the alcohol
concentration in your blood if you are suspected of driving under the
influence of alcohol or drugs, the PAS device is not one of the chemical
tests. The PAS device is a “preliminary” breath alcohol screening device
designed to determine the presence and amount of alcohol in your body.
If you agree to take the PAS test you will have to take a second test
after you are arrested (breath or blood). The officer uses the PAS
device results to determine if you will be arrested for DUI-Drunk
Driving. PAS devices do not always give accurate results. If you agree
to blow into the PAS device, you are helping the officer gather more
evidence that will be used against you in court.
Note: If you are on
probation for a previous DUI-Drunk Driving conviction, a term of your
probation may require you to submit to the PAS test. Be sure to review
your terms of probation if you are on probation for a previous DUI
conviction and consult a DUI defense attorney.
7. Choose a
blood test. If you
are arrested, choose a blood test rather than a breath test. If you
choose a breath test, the officer will know your breath alcohol
concentration immediately. He will then write his arrest report having
your breath alcohol concentration in mind. The officer is now more
likely to embellish facts in the report to support his arrest. For
instance: the driver was weaving in the lane, the driver had
slurred speech, the driver stumbled when he walked, the driver fumbled
in his wallet to get his driver license, etc. - all because the officer
knows your breath alcohol concentration before writing his report.
If you choose a blood test, the arresting officer will not know
the results of the blood test for weeks. The arrest report will more
than likely have been written prior to the blood test results being
available. The arresting officer’s report will likely be more objective
and honest because the officer wrote it without knowing the level of
your blood alcohol concentration. In addition, if you choose a blood
test, an experienced DUI-Drunk Driving defense attorney will have the
opportunity to have your blood re-tested by an independent laboratory to
verify the result as well as check for proper preservative levels, the
presence of bacteria, etc. If you choose a breath test, the breath
sample is not saved and therefore can not be retested. Also note that
things can go wrong with the blood sample, such as bacteria growth,
coagulation, etc.
Be sure to take only one test! Some officers will talk an
arrestee into taking a breath and a blood test. That’s like having two
smoking guns. Take one test only, and take a blood test.
Note: If you have not
been drinking alcohol and are being arrested for driving under the
influence of drugs, choose a urine test as it is the least accurate
test.
8. Make sure your tail lights, turn signals, etc. are working properly. Inspect your car and make sure all lights are working. Also make sure your windows are not unlawfully tinted. Many times persons are stopped by an officer because a tail light is out or the car has some other problem. The officer then smells alcohol when he walks up to the driver’s window and DUI-Drunk Driving investigation follows. Between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and thereafter, officers on patrol are looking for reasons to stop drivers to possibly get a DUI-Drunk Driving arrest.
9. Always be on your best behavior. Some police cars are equipped with video recorders and the stop and arrest are recorded. Some officers carry digital recorders and record conversations. Also many jails have video recorders so you are being recorded while you are being processed. Be polite.
10. Insist on your three completed telephone calls and make a detailed record of all events. Penal Code § 851.5 entitles an arrested person 3 completed telephone calls. This is your right and therefore you should insist! Call your cell phone and leave yourself a voice message to record your voice, that way if your speech is not slurred the recording can be used as evidence in your defense. You should also call DUI defense attorney Manuel J. Barba toll free at 1-866-442-2722.
Also remember to make a detailed record of all the events that occurred before being stopped, up to and including being released from custody. Do so while it is fresh in your mind. This information may be helpful in defending your case.
11. Retain an experienced
DUI-Drunk Driving defense attorney
to represent you. DUI cases are complex and require specialized
knowledge. DUI defense attorney Manuel J. Barba is a member of the
National College for DUI Defense, California DUI Lawyers Association,
California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, California Public Defenders
Association, and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Mr. Barba has also attended the National Criminal Defense College in
Macon, Georgia.
DUI attorney Manuel J. Barba is also a qualified Standardized Field
Sobriety Test Instructor having completed the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) and International Association of Chiefs of
Police (IACP) DWI Detection Standardized Field Sobriety Testing
Instructor Program.
Attorney Manuel J. Barba is dedicated to providing his clients with personal service as well as high quality and affordable DUI-Drunk Driving defense representation.
Call today for a free consultation Toll Free: 1-866-442-2722