DUI Law Information
By:
DUI
Information Association
If you’ve been pulled over and accused of
a drunk driving offense, or more commonly
referred to as a DUI or DWI, then you
probably have a lot of questions. You are
probably scared, confused, and a little
angry if you didn’t feel you deserved it.
Regardless of the circumstances
surrounding your incident you need to take
immediate action to protect yourself, your
freedom, and most importantly your driver’s
license. You should consult with an attorney
who specializes in DUI defense immediately.
If you cannot afford to retain an attorney
then consider meeting with one during a free
consultation to get as much free help as
possible. Here are some things you should
consider:
1. Contact DMV and request a hearing
within the specified amount of time (usually
between 7-10 days depending on the state) to
try and save your drivers license.
2. The time limit is calculated from the
issue date of the temporary driver license
or order of revocation which is usually the
day of your arrest.
3. If you are out of state, or hold an
out of state license that state's DMV will
still take action against your license.
4. This temporary driver license (paper
one the cop gave you) is valid for only a
few days from the issue date unless you
request a DMV hearing. If your DMV hearing
is requested the motor vehicles will "stay""
your suspension and your temporary license
will be extended until the hearing is
complete.
5. Don't get the DMV hearing and the
court appearance confused. The outcome of
one almost never affects the outcome of the
other.
In the DMV hearing, the hearing officer
will decide on certain issues like whether
the police officer had a legal reason to
stop you; whether the police officer had a
legal reason to arrest you; and whether or
not the blood, breath, or urine result/test
is reliable enough to suspend your license.
This type of hearing is considered
administrative and not criminal so if you
expect to be represented you will need your
own lawyer.
About
The Author
The DUI Information Association, at
http://www.duiprocess.com
provides legal information and
resources to those with DUI or DWI
conviction records.
This article was posted on
June 12, 2004 |
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