According to the following article, a judge in Fairfax County has ruled that having a BAC (Blood Alcohol Content) level of 0.08 while behind the wheel doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re driving drunk (the actual wording was that a BAC of 0.08 presumes that the individual is intoxicated)….
I’m going to go out on a limb and bet that TONS of people are going to start protesting their previous arrests… insurance companies… what are they going to do? This could be a crazy legal precedent!!
Go into the extended entry to read the article from the Richmond Times Dispatch:
DUI law ruled unconstitutional
Va. presumes guilt if blood-alcohol level is 0.08, a judge says
BY MATTHEW BARAKAT
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aug 12, 2005
McLEAN — A Fairfax County judge has ruled that key components of Virginia’s drunken-driving laws are unconstitutional, citing an obscure, decades-old U.S. Supreme Court decision that could prompt similar challenges nationwide.
Virginia’s law is unconstitutional because it presumes that an individual with a blood-alcohol content of 0.08 or higher is intoxicated, denying a defendant’s right to a presumption of innocence, Judge Ian O’Flaherty ruled in dismissing charges against at least two alleged drunken drivers last month.
As a district judge, O’Flaherty’s rulings do not establish any formal precedent, but word of the constitutional argument is spreading quickly among the defense bar. Every state has similar presumptions about intoxication at a 0.08 blood-alcohol level, so defense lawyers across the nation are likely to make similar arguments.
“I am sure there will be lawyers out in the field making similar arguments tomorrow,” Steven Oberman, chairman of the DUI defense committee at the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said in a telephone interview yesterday.
Del. David B. Albo, R-Fairfax, a defense lawyer who often practices in Fairfax, said he disagrees with O’Flaherty’s ruling and sees no difference between a presumption of intoxication at 0.08 and a presumption of speeding at 80 mph.
He said he did not see any reason to change Virginia’s drunken-driving laws. “So far not a single judge in Virginia has ruled the same way,” he said. “It’s just one judge.”
Corinne Magee, a McLean defense lawyer who successfully argued the issue to O’Flaherty, said the judge’s ruling is based on a 1985 U.S. Supreme Court case called Francis v. Franklin, which deals with prosecutors’ obligation to prove all elements of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
Magee said she came across the Francis case doing research on another case and realized it might apply to Virginia’s drunken-driving laws.
“Frankly, I was surprised” that the judge dismissed the case based on her constitutional arguments, Magee said yesterday. “But I think Judge O’Flaherty’s ruling is based on a very solid reading of this case.”
She said Virginia’s law is problematic not just because of the presumption of intoxication at 0.08, but also a presumption in the law that the blood-alcohol level at the time the test is taken is equal to the level at the time of the offense, even if the test occurs hours after police make a stop. Magee said a person’s blood-alcohol level can fluctuate up or down depending on when a person had their last drink and how their body metabolizes alcohol.
Prosecutors are now taking steps to avoid O’Flaherty on all drunken-driving cases, withdrawing cases assigned to him and instead obtaining indictments that send the cases directly to Circuit Court. Prosecutors cannot appeal cases dismissed by a district court judge, but could appeal if a circuit judge makes a similar ruling.
Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert F. Horan Jr. did not return phone calls seeking comment yesterday.
Patrick O’Connor, president of the Northern Virginia chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said O’Flaherty’s decision “undermines the efforts of the police and prosecutors to enforce the DUI laws, puts drunk drivers back behind the wheel and potentially denies justice to victims of drunk drivers.” He has requested a meeting with the judge.
O’Flaherty, who has a reputation as a fairly tough judge among defense lawyers, turned down a request for an interview. Rulings in District Court are made orally, so there is no written ruling outlining his rationale.
Oberman said laws establishing a presumption of intoxication at 0.08 blood-alcohol level have been upheld in the past, but a new challenge like the one raised by Magee provides an opportunity to revisit the issue in a different context. He said the argument’s potential effectiveness will vary from state to state based on the exact wording of the DUI laws and other factors.
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