Implied Consent and the Alcohol Concentration Test

New Hampshire law states that, “Any person who drives, operates, or attempts to operate an OHRV, drives or attempts to drive a vehicle upon the ways of this state … shall be deemed to have given consent to physical tests and examinations for the purpose of determining whether such person is under the influence of intoxicating liquor or controlled drugs, and to a chemical, infrared molecular absorption, or gas chromatograph test or tests of any or all of any combination of the following: blood, urine, or breath, for the purpose of determining the controlled drug content of such person’s blood or alcohol concentration if arrested for any offense arising out of acts alleged to have been committed while the person was driving, operating, attempting to operate, or in actual physical control of an OHRV, driving, attempting to drive, or in actual physical control of a vehicle … while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or controlled drugs or while having an alcohol concentration in excess of the statutory limits.”

Basically, if you drive in New Hampshire, whether or not you are licensed to drive by the state of New Hampshire, you have agreed that you will willingly comply with alcohol concentration tests, whether the request is for breath, blood or urine testing.

Refusing the Test
In New Hampshire, your refusal to take an alcohol concentration test can be admitted into evidence and used against you at your trial. In addition, if you are arrested and you refuse to take the alcohol concentration test requested by the officer, your license will be suspended for 180 days, even if you have no prior DWI conviction.  If you have a prior conviction – or even a prior refusal without a conviction – your license will be suspended for two years. Even worse, the suspension for refusing to take the alcohol concentration tests is not allowed to be served concurrently (at the same time) with any other punishment, but instead is an additional punishment that is tacked on to whatever other suspension you receive if convicted.  The suspension will be upheld even if you are found not guilty at your trial.

If you refuse to take the test, the officer will not force you to take it, but you will automatically lose your driving privileges in New Hampshire for doing so.  While you will have the right to appeal the suspension, the New Hampshire courts tend to support the implied consent regulation and uphold license suspensions.

Taking the Test
In the state of New Hampshire, if you take the alcohol concentration test and your results show an alcohol concentration above the legal limit, you will lose your license. However, while you must immediately surrender your license to the officer (both in the case of refusing to take the test and in the case of having results above the legal limit) the officer will issue you a 30-day temporary permit, because the suspension itself requires 30 days’ notice.  During the 30-day notice period, you can appeal the suspension. The burden of proof is on you as the petitioner to demonstrate that the stop should not have been made because the officer had no reasonable grounds to arrest you.

This post contains excerpts from The DWI Book, the definitive guide to protecting your rights in the face of New Hampshire’s tough DWI/DUI laws.

Avoiding DWI Arrest, Part 2: Clues to Inebriation

There are certain behaviors that officers look for when they study people driving that give clues about whether or not the driver is impaired. Driving with your face too close to the windshield, staring forward or putting your head out the window, will raise concern with police. Gripping the steering wheel very tightly, making obscene gestures or yelling at people will do the same. Even more obvious behaviors include chasing another car, cutting people off, weaving in and out of traffic, or hitting or almost hitting other cars or property. If you violate other traffic rules, such as running stops signs or red lights or driving without your headlights on, you are almost guaranteed to draw unwanted attention to yourself.  Also, if you become reckless with your driving by driving in the wrong lane, going in the wrong direction on a one-way road or driving completely off the road, you will virtually guarantee a traffic stop and most likely an arrest.

Alcohol impairs many of the judgments and reactions you need for driving. Police officers use these visible clues to determine your impairment. Police officers may use simple tests such as making you walk in a straight line or touch the tip of your nose with the tip of your finger, but those tests are just indicators of your coordination, and coordination is greatly affected by consumption of alcohol. These tests are called field sobriety tests.

Alcohol reduces your ability to stay focused, makes hand-eye coordination extremely difficult, and limits your peripheral sight.  It slows your ability to react to the things that happen while you are driving, such as traffic lights changing or quick movements from other vehicles.  Being impaired by alcohol also makes it more difficult to multitask: shifting while depressing the clutch, driving between designated lines on the road while maintaining the proper speed, or activating a signal before a turn while still managing to respond to traffic.  Actions such as these make it very easy for officers to recognize suspicious vehicles.

In 2007, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) launched a nationwide campaign to reduce drinking and driving. You have probably heard the catch-phrase: “Over the Limit: Under Arrest” wherever you happen to live. The NHTSA provided training and marketing materials to police stations across the country; officers are more educated and motivated to remove dangerous drivers from the street, and unfortunately, a lot of social drinkers are getting caught up in the political pressure.

Stay tuned for Part 3: Dos and Dont’s of a Traffic Stop

This post contains excerpts from The DWI Book, the definitive guide to protecting your rights in the face of New Hampshire’s tough DWI/DUI laws.

The Right to Remain Silent

If you are arrested, you must do everything you can to protect your rights.  Any attempt you make to explain the situation, and anything you do that can later become part of the testimony used to convict you, will only make your case more difficult to defend.  The United States Constitution guarantees you the right to be free from self-incrimination. That is why, when the police officer arrests you, they tell you that you have the right to remain silent. Exercise that right!

Once you have been read your Miranda rights, you must inform the officer of your intent to remain silent, but even if you forgot and began talking, you can stop at any time without it being used against you. Do realize that your right to remain silent does not prevent you from having to cooperate with the officer and provide your name, identification, proof of insurance, etc., but you do NOT have to answer questions about where you were, what you were doing, how many drinks you had, or anything else related to your arrest.

Unless you are in an accident, injure someone or are stopped at a sobriety roadblock check point, you will most likely be stopped based on an officer’s reasonable suspicion that you are driving while intoxicated or for another motor vehicle violation.  Reasonable suspicion is less strict than probable cause, which is required to arrest you. New Hampshire’s exact requirements for probable cause have not come through the courts and remain ill-defined, but cases have been overturned for lack of probable cause. In court, the police officer may be required to testify about what gave them probable cause to arrest you, which may include your physical appearance at the time of the traffic stop (having bloodshot eyes, slurring your speech, weaving or being unable to control your gross motor functions), the odor of alcohol, evidence of alcohol containers visible in your vehicle, or your inability to pass sobriety field tests.

Remaining silent is critical to preventing the officer from obtaining any evidence that may later be used in court to incriminate you. While you should be polite and cooperative about providing your identification and registration, the officer will be asking you questions, not to hear the answers, but to identify if you are slurring your speech or have the smell of alcohol on your breath.

Trying to explain what you were doing, where you were going, or how much you had or had not been drinking will NOT help you avoid arrest.  Remaining calm and polite, not fumbling around for your information, and speaking clearly when you must speak are important details. Keep your answers short and to the point; do not become belligerent.

This post contains excerpts from The DWI Book, the definitive guide to protecting your rights in the face of New Hampshire’s tough DWI/DUI laws.

Avoiding a DWI Arrest, Part 1: Don’t Pull Over

If a police officer directs you to pull over by either activating his emergency lights or motioning to you, you must follow his directions. However, if an officer is simply following you, you do not have to pull over. It is not against the law to share road space with a police car.

People get nervous when they see an officer and sometimes their first instinct is to pull over, even without be required to do so. Resist the urge to pull over. Just do not do it. You are completely within your rights as a citizen to continue driving (making sure you are obeying the rules of the road and thereby not giving the officer any reason to pull you over) to your destination unless the officer flashes his lights or motions for you to pull over.

You are protected to a great degree by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.  The United States Supreme Court in Terry v. Ohio 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868, 20 L.Ed.2d 889 (1968) created a guideline called the “Terry stop”.  The United States Supreme Court said an officer cannot stop you unless they have legal justification to do so (i.e., you run a red light, weave in and out of your lane, or do something else that causes suspicion).

However, an officer has the right to pull over a vehicle whose registered owner has a suspended license, as long as the officer believes that (1) the registered owner is driving or (2) “observes nothing to indicate that the driver is not the owner…”
Even if all you do is pull into a parking lot in an attempt to avoid the officer, the officer can then follow you into the parking lot, where you have voluntarily come to a stop, and confront you in an effort to determine if you are violating the law without having to have any reasonable suspicion. If you continue driving, however, and the officer is forced to put on his siren or flashing lights in order to pull you over, then the officer has to prove that you have done something worthy of being detained.

If the officer cannot prove that he had reasonable suspicion that you were committing or about to commit a crime which caused him or her to pull you over, your entire case can potentially be thrown out of court.

Stay tuned for Part 2: Clues to Inebriation

This post contains excerpts from The DWI Book, the definitive guide to protecting your rights in the face of New Hampshire’s tough DWI/DUI laws.