Posted on 08/12/2005 11:36:01 AM PDT by Rodney King
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....
(Excerpt) Read more at timesdispatch.com ...
I agree with you. But do not try drinking and driving in Oregon. We were the first state in the country to adopt .o8 as the legal limit. Two or three beers for most people will put them over the limit. The entire state is one, vast police trap with cops stopping people for seat belt violations and faulty turn signals.
"laws are the lazy way out"
Oh, very true. But mankind loves laws, the more the better. And it doesn't matter if there are already 40 laws on the books that address the same thing. Jesus Christ boiled down all of the Old Testament law into "Love thy neighbor as thyself". All of our laws could be broken down into a simple moral code but that would require thinking whether they were breaking this moral code so they opt for specific laws.
Thank you. Very cogent. Keep up the good work.
"If this law is overturned, all the legislatures need to do is to simply make it a crime to have a BAC over .08. Right now all it does is create a presumption that you have broken the law."
Anything near .08 in Georgia and you're off to jail with your car impounded. That's some presumption. And then there's the few thousand dollars later...your job and your life in jeopardy.
My theory on this is that social engineers (like MADD) should have no standing in a free republic...
Now drunk drivers, those real and actual drunk drivers who are visibly impaired, and readily proven with a few field sobriety tests like the one's that worked for years, throw the book at'em Dano!
I'm a fifteen year recovering alcoholic too, so I no longer drink alcohol, but the laws these days border on extremism and tyranny. What was once a perfectly reasonable crusade against drunk driving has now been made into a war against anyone who imbibes. Given the opportunity they will criminalize a driver who has had a single beer.
We are giving police and the courts power over every aspect of our conduct. I was in a courtroom the other day with people charged with petty crimes. I drive mental patients and one had not appeared in court because of being hospitalized. The security guards and police treated everyone who entered the courthouse like dogs. One fellow had been ticketed for jaywalking in front of the courthouse. He was half blind and on crutches. What a criminal he is.
Liberals love controlling every aspect of human behavior. Liberals have no faith at all in their fellow citizens. They want rules and regulations for everything that could ever happen. That's a police state. And I'm appalled at how many people here think it's a good thing.
We don't punish our sex offenders and predators. But we have police prowling for speeders in artificially low speed zones and drivers having a couple of beers? Insanity, pure and simple.
The most dangerous phrase ever uttered is "there ought to be a law"(against something the speaker doesn't like).Our legislators are only too willing to write those laws.
But are sitting idly by?
Have you called for a ban of drivers over 75? Some older drivers may still have the reflexes and ability, but most are unsafe at any speed.
Have you called for a ban of drivers under 20? Some may have the temperament and the good judgement to drive, but most are extremely unsafe.
Have you called for the random testing of legal over the counter and prescrition drugs? Taking sedating antidepressants even 10 hours before driving is equal to driving drunk. 10 mg of Valium can cause greater driving impairment than a blood alcohol concentration of 0.1 (at or above the legal limit in all states). Antihistamines which block allergic reactions slow down reaction time and impair coordination. Over-the-counter decongestants can cause drowsiness, anxiety, and dizziness.
Have you called for a total ban of cellphone usage in cars? All of the researchers agree that the risk of crashing is multiplied when a driver is talking on the phone (2600 deaths, 570,000 injuries, and 1.5 million crashes causing property damage). FYI: Since it's been shown that the distraction from cell phones is mostly a cognitive one, having both hands on the wheel will make little difference.
Yes, the point is that you allow your legislature to sit idly by doing nothing about hundreds of other types of impairments. These impaired drivers endanger your childern but you are happy as long as they have an arbitrary law against a .08 BAC.
The US Department of Transportation estimates that the typical driver will have a near automobile accident one to two times per month and all will be in a collision of some type on average every 6 years. According to the National Safety Council (NSA), there are more than 12 million motor vehicle accidents annually that involve more than 20 million vehicles. Of these accidents, about 6.4 million are nonfatal, over 2 million are injurious and about 4.3 million are property damage only. The following charts are from the NHTSA:
Chart 6 Occupant Fatalities in 2002
By Age and Restraint Use, In Passenger Vehicles
Age Group | Restrained | Percent Restrained | Unrestrained | Percent Unrestrained | Total | Total Percent |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0-4 | 274 | 59.6% | 185 | 40.4% | 459 | 100% |
5-9 | 205 | 51.4% | 195 | 48.6% | 400 | 100% |
10-15 | 350 | 37.7% | 576 | 62.3% | 926 | 100% |
16-20 | 1,999 | 35.5% | 3,626 | 64.5% | 5,625 | 100% |
21-24 | 1,199 | 32.6% | 2,477 | 67.4% | 3,676 | 100% |
25-44 | 3,232 | 32.7% | 6,656 | 67.3% | 9,888 | 100% |
45-64 | 2,947 | 46.8% | 3,353 | 53.2% | 6,300 | 100% |
65-74 | 1,253 | 58.5% | 887 | 41.5% | 2,140 | 100% |
75+ | 1,983 | 63.9% | 1,122 | 36.1% | 3,105 | 100% |
TOTAL | 13,448 | 41.4% | 19,071 | 58.6% | 32,519 | 100% |
Chart 7 Occupants Killed or Injured In 2002
By Injury Severity, In Passenger Vehicles
Injury Severity | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age Group | Killed | Incapacitating* | Non- incapacitating |
Possible Injury | Injury Severity Unknown | Total Injured | Total |
0-4 | 459 | 6,588 | 15,552 | 35,602 | 783 | 58,525 | 58,984 |
5-9 | 400 | 7,038 | 21,087 | 42,822 | 758 | 71,705 | 72,105 |
10-15 | 926 | 12,569 | 34,745 | 74,536 | 1,062 | 122,912 | 123,838 |
16-20 | 5,625 | 56,053 | 149,645 | 266,200 | 4,167 | 476,065 | 481,690 |
21-24 | 3,676 | 35,973 | 89,255 | 166,995 | 3,302 | 295,525 | 299,201 |
25-44 | 9,888 | 99,504 | 227,077 | 595,110 | 7,912 | 929,603 | 939,491 |
45-64 | 6,300 | 57,286 | 118,747 | 343,343 | 3,711 | 523,087 | 529,387 |
65-74 | 2,140 | 13,343 | 32,042 | 65,376 | 391 | 111,152 | 113,292 |
75+ | 3,105 | 14,604 | 28,096 | 49,983 | 422 | 93,105 | 96,210 |
TOTAL | 32,519 | 302,957 | 716,246 | 1,639,968 | 22,507 | 2,681,678 | 2,714,197 |
*An incapacitating injury is any injury, other than a fatal injury, that prevents the injured person from walking, driving, or normally continuing the activities the person was capable of performing before the injury occurred.
It should be noted that 4,563,000 cases were reported by emergency departments to the CDC classified as "autmobile injury" in 2000.
According to Federal Highway Administration statistics for 2000:
Fatal Crash Occupant Statistics by Restraint Use | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
restraint use | Survived | Percent | Killed | Percent | Total | Percent | |
yes | 31,328 | 73% | 11,622 | 27% | 42,950 | 52.4% | |
no | 13,985 | 44% | 17,672 | 56% | 31,657 | 38.6% | |
unknown | 4,742 | 64% | 2,616 | 36% | 7,358 | 8.9% | |
TOTAL | 50,055 | 60.3% | 31910 | 39.6% | 81965 | 100% |
Vehicle Occupant Statistics by Restraint Use | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
restraint use | Uninjured | Percent | Injured | Percent | Total | Percent | |
yes | 2,114,000 | 47% | 2,351,000 | 53% | 4,465,000 | 81.4% | |
no | 152,000 | 30% | 359,000 | 70% | 511,000 | 9.3% | |
unknown | 311,000 | 61% | 199,000 | 39% | 511,000 | 9.3% | |
TOTAL | 2,577,000 | 46% | 25503559 | 54% | 5487000 | 100% |
Given that there are an estimated 296 million people in the U.S.A., according to the above statistics, the probability for any person in the U.S.A. to be an occupant of an automobile accident by random chance in any arbitrary year would be 5487000/296000000 (or 98.1463% against). However, over the course of 80 years, random chance suggests 77.62% chance for the event to occur at least once during that time. The above data (2351000/5487000) shows there's a 57.15% chance against those involved in an accident and wearing a seat belt from being injured. So the risk to the any member of the population at large amounts to 1.853 * 42.85 (or 99.2% against). However, over the course of 80 years, random chance suggests 57.35% for that event to occur. And finally, the probability that, by chance, one will be injured in an automobile accident (while wearing a seat belt), and the injuries being fatal amounts to (11622/3191) * 42.85 * 1.853 (or 10723:1 against). However, over the course of 80 years, this becomes almost a 1% certainty.
Perhaps my statement of virtual certainty of an injurious accident during one's driving career was a bit over-zealous, in that the great likelyhood exists within one's lifetime. However, I rest on my original, and subsequent (this) posting that the preponderance of chance is precisely what I stated, and that furthermore, the likelyhood of injury (based on the statistics for unrestrained motor vehicle occupants) much greater. I'll concede that the statistics presented appear to show a higher incidence (compare incidence w/ prevalance) of injury, but what would the fatality statistics be if but for the restraints?
Akin to the most famous statement that, "all it would take to make the world's greatest evangelist is for anybody to spend five seconds in hell", all it would take would be to experience a loved one taken from you by a most excellent repeat existing alchohol-prohibiting law offender getting of "scott free." And to that thought I hang my head in shame (not because I'm guilty of that), becuase I've been there.
Anybody who has ever been accused of an alchohol related traffic offense had better wake up; it's most likely their best last chance.
*** DING DING DING *** No more calls; we have a winner!
"Did you really think we want those laws observed?" said Dr. Ferris. "We want them to be broken. You'd better get it straight that it's not a bunch of boy scouts you're up against... We're after power and we mean it... There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? What's there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed nor enforced or objectively interpreted and you create a nation of law-breakers and then you cash in on guilt. Now that's the system, Mr. Reardon, that's the game, and once you understand it, you'll be much easier to deal with." ('Atlas Shrugged' 1957)
I've never understood why they don't do this. There are streams of extremely drunk people hopping in their cars and driving home from every bar every night.
"The standard I set for myself is 2 beers in one hour, or 4 beers in 2 hours."
You should be very, very careful. It could be as few as 2 beers in 2 hours and you'd hit .08 BAC. There are way to many variables involved to ever be certain.
According to the Drink Wheel, I could have 5 pints (16 or 20 oz? How strong?) of beer over 2 hours and still be just a hair over the limit (.085 BAC). I can tell you from personal experience that after 5 pints (18 oz, I think) of 5% alcohol beer (v/v) in a 2-hour period that I am really not in any condition to be driving. So, to my point of view, a cut off of a .08 BAC seems quite generous, actually.
ps, I also agree that the penalties for DUI should be geared towards the level of intoxication - someone just barely over the limit should not be punished nearly as harshly (I'd suggest a shortish license suspension would be appropriate) as someone who is at 2 or 3 times the legal limit behind the wheel.
Me too, but that would be akin to the government repealing a tax that has been previously instituted....never happen.
ping
The burden would then shift to show that even though you exceeded the legal limit, you were not ACTUALLY intoxicated. In other words, the law provides an out for the guy who can handle his liquor.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.