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Florida DUI 10 Day Rule

October 27, 2011 by  
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Florida DUI lawyers who defend DUI, DWI, or drunk driving cases in Florida should know about the “Ten Day” Rule.

When someone is arrested for a Florida DUI, there are really two separate cases that arise: the court case, where a person’s liberty is at stake, and the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles case.

duval florida 300x199 Florida DUI 10 Day RuleIf you have been arrested for Florida DUI, and you refused to take a breath, blood or urine test, OR if you took the test and your result is 0.08% or higher, you have only 10 days to request a special hearing with the FDHSMV to save your license.

Failure to timely request a hearing will result in a penalty of at least a six-month suspension (and as much as an 18-month suspension) of your Florida driving privileges.

If you have been arrested for a Florida DUI, you must contact a qualified DUI Attorney in Florida today.

Riverside DUI Lawyers

September 23, 2011 by  
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Riverside, California DUI Attorney Manuel J. Barba is a Drunk Driving lawyer dedicated to defending people accused of Drunk Driving, DUI, DWI, and Driving Under the Influence.

If you or a loved one has been arrested for DUI – Drunk Driving, it is essential to have expert DUI legal representation to protect your rights and your driving privilege.

Drunk Driving defense attorney Manuel J. Barba’s primary goal is to provide his clients with personal, high quality, and affordable legal representation.

Visit Riverside Drunk Driving Lawyer Manuel Barba on the web or call him toll free at 1-866-442-2722 for a FREE CONSULTATION.

Riverside DUI Lawyers

September 23, 2011 by  
Filed under Arizona DUI Laws

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Riverside, California DUI Attorney Manuel J. Barba is a Drunk Driving lawyer dedicated to defending people accused of Drunk Driving, DUI, DWI, and Driving Under the Influence.

If you or a loved one has been arrested for DUI – Drunk Driving, it is essential to have expert DUI legal representation to protect your rights and your driving privilege.

Drunk Driving defense attorney Manuel J. Barba’s primary goal is to provide his clients with personal, high quality, and affordable legal representation.

Visit Riverside Drunk Driving Lawyer Manuel Barba on the web or call him toll free at 1-866-442-2722 for a FREE CONSULTATION.

Operation ‘Drive Hammered, Get Nailed’ Begins Soon

August 18, 2011 by  
Filed under Arizona DUI Laws

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Issaquah police officers plan to join a regional push to pull drunken drivers from local roads as summer comes to a close.

The agency is joining other police departments in King County — and more than 10,000 law enforcement agencies nationwide — from Aug. 19 to Sept. 5 in the Drive Hammered, Get Nailed campaign.

Beneath the clever title is a serious message about the impacts of drunken driving and driving under the influence. DUI crashes claimed 38 people on King County roads last year.

During the Drive Hammered, Get Nailed campaign last year, officers on routine and extra patrols arrested 438 people for DUI. Overall, prosecutors charged 9,521 people countywide for DUI last year.

Besides the Issaquah Police Department, the Drive Hammered, Get Nailed campaign includes the nearby Bellevue, Newcastle, North Bend, Sammamish, Snoqualmie and Renton police departments, in addition to the Washington State Patrol.

The effort is organized and supported under the aegis of the King County Target Zero Task Force, a regional effort to crack down on unsafe driving practices.

“This summer, we have unfortunately seen the tragic consequences of DUI crashes in our communities,” Kirkland Police Sgt. Lisa Brouelette said in a statement. “We are here to get unsafe drivers off the road and encourage you to plan for a sober ride home before going out.”

In addition, a state law — nicknamed Hailey’s Law — to require the towing of vehicles driven by drivers arrested for DUI went into effect last month.

The law, a state patrol priority during the 2011 legislative session, sets a 12-hour mandatory hold on such vehicles. The measure is intended to prevent impaired drivers from returning to vehicles and driving again.

Only a registered or legal owner not in the car at the time of arrest is allowed to pick up the car out of impound before the 12-hour hold expires.

The measure is nicknamed for Hailey French, a woman severely injured after a drunken driver hit her in a head-on crash along the Mount Baker Highway in January 2007.

Police had arrested the drunken driver, Janine Parker, hours earlier, but did not book her into jail or impound her vehicle.

“This new law helps eliminate the danger of drunk drivers getting back into their cars and putting everyone at risk,” Washington Traffic Safety Commission Director Lowell Porter said in a statement. “Now, all drunk drivers face the costs of towing and impound in addition to jail time, losing their driver’s license and the high cost of a DUI.”

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Kansas DUI Checkpoints to Be Conducted Through Labor Day

August 18, 2011 by  
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From Thursday through Labor Day, law officers on both sides of the Kansas state line will target DUI offenders in an operation that authorities announced today.

Police from several agencies delivered the message today at a Kansas City, Kan., parking lot. They stood in front of a 26-foot trailer used to quickly set up checkpoints, which they promised would get plenty of use.

Federal grants pay states for police overtime for the enforcement efforts and the states distribute money to police. Police said that will let them go out in record numbers nationwide.

The Kansas Department of Transportation provided the trailer that police agencies can use, and Mission police have it now.

Mission Police Chief John Simmons said area police will use both DUI checkpoints and saturation patrols looking for drunken drivers and other offenders.

That van has lights to illuminate the surrounding area and holds cones and other equipment to quickly set up a checkpoint. DUI suspects will be breath tested at an adjacent trailer, police said.

Enforcement efforts are likely to be most intense from Wednesday through Saturday, they said.

Police also will stress personal responsibility, Simmons said.

“We want to ask people to think before they drive,” he said. “If they’re hosting a party, how are they going to get their guests home safely?”

The law’s constant battle against DUI is special, police say, because impaired driving kills almost 12,000 people a year.

Jill Kenney, an assistant Johnson County prosecutor and chief of the traffic unit there, said the state passed new laws this year that increase the penalty for DUI convictions.

Minimum fines for first-time DUIs increased from $500 to $750, she said, and police now have three hours instead of two to get blood, urine or breath tests.

Offenders face two days in jail and must have licenses suspended for a minimum of 30 days and then pay to get ignition interlocks, she said.

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Secret Service Agent Charged With DUI in Iowa

August 17, 2011 by  
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An off duty Secret Service agent was arrested for drunk driving early Saturday morning in Decorah, IA two days prior to President Barack Obama’s visit there.

Decorah Police Chief Bill Nixon says Secret Service agent Daniel V., 40, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence. A copy of the criminal complaint with more details about Daniel’s arrest was not available because a local attorney in Decorah, Karl Knudson, currently has possession of it. Knudson was not available for comment at his law office this afternoon.

Secret Service spokesman, George Ogilvee confirms Daniel is a special agent with the Secret Service and says the matter has been turned over to the agency’s Office of Professional Responisiblity for an internal investigation. Ogilvee would not say if Daniel V. continued to work with the president’s security team in Iowa after his arrest on Saturday, August 13. “We’re not going to talk about where he is,” Ogilvee said.

President Obama held a town hall meeting in Decorah, Iowa on Monday afternoon as part of his three day Midwestern bus tour.

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SL Trib: A Utah DUI Primer

August 14, 2011 by  
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Utah’s impaired-driving law is pretty straightforward.

• It’s against the law to drive under the influence of alcohol.

• You are considered legally drunk when you are in physical control of a vehicle and have a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 or higher.

• You can’t drink any alcoholic beverage while driving or as a passenger in a motor vehicle at any time. And you can’t carry an open container of alcohol in the passenger compartment of a vehicle.

But many drivers might ask how many drinks it takes to be impaired. This, of course, varies by the individual and can be affected by age, gender, physical condition, food consumed and medication. Also, different mixed drinks contain different amounts of alcohol.

But, for the average person, there is some impairment after one-half to two drinks. As few as three of the right kinds of drinks can raise the blood alcohol level to 0.08 percent. In that case, the average risk of a crash is 10 times more than normal for adult and 70 to 80 times normal for someone under 21.

Costs of getting a DUI can be severe.

According to the Utah Department of Public Safety, fine and court fees can cost as much as $1,200. A towing-impound-and-registration fee can cost $350. Lawyers typically charge $1,200. There is a $350 fine for an education and treatment fund, $200 cost for driver license and $2,500 for an ignition interlock system for three years. Insurance costs can skyrocket to as much as $4,000 a year. Thus, a DUI could cost as much as $10,100.

If you get a DUI in Utah, you will go to jail where you will be booked, fingerprinted and stay until you see a judge or make bail. Your car will be impounded. A first-time offender will have his or her driver license suspended for 120 days. If you refuse a breath test, you will lose your driver license for 18 months and officers can obtain a warrant to forcibly draw your blood. If you are drinking and under 21, you will lose your license for one year or until you turn 21, whichever is longer.

Such arrests are fairly common. In 2009, for example, more than 15,000 people were arrested for DUI in Utah.

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Connecticut State Police to Host DUI Checkpoints Tonight

August 14, 2011 by  
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The Connecticut State Police and East Haddam Police will be out looking for speeders and intoxicated drivers.

Sobriety checkpoints, DUI road-blocks, and roving patrols are conducted by law enforcement, in an effort to keep our roadways safer.

License. registration, and insurance inspections, as well as ‘field sobriety tests’ will be taking place this evening, Saturday, August 13th.

Driving under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs, driving at high rates of speed, distracted driving, and lack of seat-belt use are all issues that can potentially lead to tragic and often deadly consequences.

The Connecticut State Police, in conjunction with the East Haddam Resident Troopers’ Office and East Haddam Police will be out on location and in the area tonight, looking for speeders and intoxicated drivers.

For more information, you may contact TFC Jeff Rhoades or TFC Steven Bellandese at the East Haddam Resident Troopers’ Office at 860-873-1226, or the Connecticut State Police, Troop K at 860-537-7500.

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Denver Broncos’ Kicker Charged With DUI

August 12, 2011 by  
Filed under Arizona DUI Laws

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It’s perfectly acceptable for Broncos kicker Matt Prater to drive a football through the uprights. It’s unacceptable, however, for him to drive his car while intoxicated.

In breaking news, Prater was arrested last week for allegedly driving drunk in Greenwood Village, and for fleeing the scene of an accident.

Prater is in his 5th season out of Central Florida. He has a career average of 79.1% on field goals with a long of 59 yards.

Prater suited up Thursday night for the Broncos first preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys and connected on all three of his field goal attempts.

Consequences will likely come from both the state and from the NFL if Prater is convicted.

Steve Hauschka is the Broncos second team kicker. Hauschka played in the final weeks of the Broncos season last year since Prater sat out with an injury.

Prater signed just signed a contract this July and is slated to receive $1.835 million this year.

More to come as details are released.

If you’ve too been charged with DUI in Greenwood Village, it’s essential for your freedom that you quickly contact a Colorado DUI attorney to discuss your legal options.

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GOP Drops John McGee DUI Resolution

August 11, 2011 by  
Filed under Arizona DUI Laws

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Canyon County Republican leaders voted down a resolution to investigate state Sen. John McGee’s June DUI Tuesday at their monthly meeting.

Precinct chairpersons defeated the proposal 22 to 10. Some members of the County Republican Central Committee that voted on the resolution spoke harshly of the measure brought forth by District 13 chairwoman Ronalee Linsenmann.

“What we have is an example of a personal vendetta rather than a serious motion,” committee member Jim Rice said.

But others praised Linsenmann for bringing the subject up for debate. Her resolution would also have had the Central Committee vote on whether to keep McGee as chairman.

At the last Central Committee meeting McGee, acting as chairman, passed Linsenmann’s resolution on to the Central Committee executive board, postponing a vote on the issue by the committee itself.

On Tuesday, the executive board voted to send the resolution to the committee with a “do not pass” recommendation. Linsenmann voiced the only dissenting vote on the board.

McGee, of Caldwell, handed his duties as chairman over to Vice Chairman Steve Kren at both the executive board meeting and the Central Committee meeting while the resolution was discussed.

“I think it’s more appropriate that Steve review this,” McGee said.

The Central Committee also voted on and passed 23-6 a resolution brought by Julie Yamamoto in support of McGee with a recommendation not to address McGee’s DUI again.

In both the executive board and Central Committee meetings Linsenmann stood firm on her desire to consider taking McGee’s chairmanship from him to protect the reputation of the Republican Party.

“We are being just inundated with all kinds of bad behavior,” Linsenmann said. “We’re trying to create a caste system where some people just don’t suffer … consequences.

“If we want to renew the faith in the Republican Party, we need to act like our reputation matters.”

Other committee members said McGee had his day in court, has been punished and has publicly apologized.

“This is an aberration,” Todd Lakey said about McGee’s DUI. “There’s no pattern in this conduct. John took responsibility and pleaded guilty and paid his restitution.”

Linsenmann revised her resolution from last month to include other accusations of what she called “abuse of power” by McGee. The resolution accused McGee of paying transportation and accommodations for students he picked as part of the Canyon County delegation for the 2008 State Republican Convention, among other accusations.

Carl Anderson of Caldwell said his son was a member of that group and McGee didn’t pay his way. Linsenmann said a member of the group told her otherwise.

The resolution also said McGee prevented Linsenmann’s “lawfully presented” motion from being heard by the Central Committee last month and “that action validated a continuing example of such abuse of power.”

McGee said in the executive board meeting that his actions last month were “the appropriate way to handle it.”

Central Committee secretary Nancy Baxter disagreed with Linsenmann about McGee but praised her for her work with the party. She said McGee deserves to have his entire contribution to the party considered.

“He does not need to have an unblemished record destroyed like this,” Baxter said. “We need to turn around and appreciate him for what he has done.”

Reaction from McGee

Sen. John McGee, R-Caldwell, said after the vote that he was “humbled and flattered” by the Canyon County Republican Central Committee’s support.

“I look forward to continuing to serve as the chairman of the party and continuing to serve my role as state senator,” McGee said.

When asked why he turned the meetings Tuesday over to Vice Chairman Steve Kren for discussion of the resolution about him and did not do the same when the resolution was discussed last month, McGee said “that’s not what the story’s about.”

“The story is overwhelmingly the people of the Central Committee supported my chairmanship of the party,” McGee said.

He also said all questions about what happened the night of his DUI arrest have been answered.

“It’s all there,” McGee said. “This has now been adjudicated by the court system and I’m fulfilling my punishment and my debt to society, and Hanna (McGee’s wife) and I are moving forward.

“The vast majority of people in that room said enough is enough. The party’s moving forward and my family’s moving forward. It’s time to move on to other things.”

About McGee’s DUI

Police arrested Sen. John McGee, R-Caldwell, early June 19 after he took a Ford Excursion and cargo trailer from the southwest Boise home of a stranger and got it stuck in a yard down the street. A breath test showed the four-term lawmaker’s blood-alcohol content was nearly twice the legal limit, police said. McGee pleaded guilty to the DUI and a charge of operating a vehicle without the owner’s consent was dropped.

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