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At the present time, there are a number of processes that are happening without your involvement. The police officer who arrested you is completing the arrest/investigation report and submitting it to a supervisor for review and approval. Soon thereafter, the report will be taken to the District Attorney’s Office. The District Attorney assigned to incoming cases will review the police officer’s report to determine (1) whether the charges should be filed as suggested by the police officer, (2) whether certain charges should be added or deleted and, (3) whether or not certain charges will be filed as misdemeanors or felonies. Regardless of what is charged by the District Attorney, we may ultimately be able to negotiate your case from different points of view, including reducing felonies to misdemeanors, dismissal of various charges, etc.
FIRST APPEARANCE IN CRIMINAL COURT - ARRAIGNMENT. Shortly after you were arrested, you were either released on your own behalf (commonly referred to as being “released on your own recognizance”) or bail was set by the arresting officer. Bail at this level is set according to a predetermined schedule. If you were not able to arrange your release initially, you were probably brought to court within four days of the arrest date. At that particular court date, either arrangements were made for your release or a new date was probably set for bail review. As a result of the above, a court date eventually has been set for your arraignment.
The arraignment is generally the first required appearance in criminal court. The date for the arraignment is usually given to you by either jail personnel or a bondsman when you were released from jail. One of the most common mistakes made by those who do not have an attorney is their failure to accomplish a number of tasks prior to the arraignment. It is foolhardy to wait for the date of the arraignment to begin working on your case. A great deal can be accomplished by both you and your attorney prior to the arraignment date which can be extremely helpful in the defense of your case. Foremost of these tasks is having your attorney make contact immediately with DMV to satisfy the 10 Day Rule (discussed in the DMV section of this information). If all of the charges are misdemeanors (no felonies included whatsoever), the attorney may appear in court for you eliminating the necessity of your having to leave work or your family to go to court. At this hearing, the court is informed by your attorney that you are represented by a lawyer. Secondly, other decisions are made such as the issuance of time waivers, setting of future court dates, etc. The attorney will get the arrest/investigation report and the criminal complaint which states all of the charges that have been brought against you. The attorney will then begin the process of comparing factual recollections, acquiring further discovery, formulating strategy, ordering retests of alcohol samples, researching and drafting Motions to Suppress, Motions to Dismiss, etc., and negotiating with the District Attorney’s office, etc.
In addition, a criminal court conviction will result in a separate suspension for six months. This separate suspension increases to ten months if (1) your blood alcohol concentration was at or above .20%, or (2) you refused to take a blood or breath test. The DMV and court suspensions run together, and the court suspension is avoidable if you have the information to properly accomplish the required tasks. The court suspension increases to one year if there were injuries caused by the DUI driving.
All court and DMV suspensions can be challenged. Contact your attorney as soon as possible so that he/she can begin the necessary process to restore your license and to eliminate or reduce the suspensions to the least amount of time possible.
If you have one or more prior suspensions for a DUI or alcohol-related “Wet” reckless driving in the last ten years, then the DMV will attempt to suspend your license for one year with no possibility of a hardship exception. That suspension increases to two years if you have one prior and refused to take a blood or breath test during this latest arrest, or three years if you have two priors and refused the tests. In addition a court conviction results in a two-year suspension if you have one prior, a three-year revocation if you have two priors, and a four-year revocation if you have three priors. The period of revocation is even greater if there were injuries caused by the DUI driving. If you have a commercial license then your commercial privileges would be revoked for life after your second DUI. These suspensions can and should be vigorously analyzed and litigated at a DMV hearing, if possible. Your attorney can show you how to cut most court suspensions in half and get a work license at the earliest opportunity.
Assuming you were validly licensed at the time of arrest, then this license is a 30-day temporary license with full driving privileges. Once you hire an attorney, the very first thing he/she should do is contact DMV to schedule a hearing in order to preserve your opportunity to challenge the DMV suspensions outlined above. The actual contacting of DMV must occur within the first ten days following your receipt of the temporary license. In some cases, we will be able to get a hearing by contacting DMV even after the ten-day period.
The DMV may not be able to give you an in-person hearing within the 30-day period following your arrest. By acting promptly, we are able to extend the thirty-day license for as long as it is necessary to acquire and litigate a DMV hearing designed to fight the taking of your license. This explanation is not clearly set forth in your temporary license although it is referred to under “HEARING INFORMATION” on the front of your temporary license.
Unfortunately, sometimes a person who has been arrested for a DUI receives well intentioned but bad advice from friends and family. The advice generally goes something like this: “why get a lawyer, you know you must be guilty since you were arrested”, “my friend got a lawyer and he didn’t do much for her”, etc. It is crucial to get an expert DUI lawyer to handle your criminal and DMV case even though you may have been legally “drinking and driving”. In most cases, we can get all or some of the charges dismissed or reduced, acquire a reduction in various aspects of the final sentence and/ or often reduce or mitigate the length of the suspension of a driver’s license.
Whenever you are dealing with a charge which is more than an infraction (i.e. a speeding ticket, running a stop sign, etc.) there are severe consequences. A DUI is a criminal case -not a traffic case. If you are poor or unemployed you should seek the services of the public defender’s office. Even if you are represented by the public defender, you may still want to hire a private lawyer to handle your DMV matter (which cannot be handled by the public defender). Only an expert DUI lawyer is equipped to handle the variety of issues that are involved in the defense of a DUI case. These include proof problems involving establishing the driver’s identity, elimination of drinking subsequent to driving, search and seizure issues i.e., probable cause, articulable suspicion, etc.; pharmacology/chemistry defenses such as rising blood alcohol concentrations, retrograde extrapolation, chemical test errors and retesting of blood/urine samples.
An experienced DUI attorney can provide as successful and complete a defense as is possible under the circumstances of each case. Most defenses apply to both the criminal case and DMV and include some or all of the following work by a DUI expert:
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Dinan Law, serving Sonoma, Napa, Marin, Mendocino, Lake and Humboldt Counties, California
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