Posted On: September 30, 2008

DWI vs. DUI, what is the Difference? by Plano DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson

By Collin County DWI attorney Troy P. Burleson

A DUI (Driving under the influence) is a class C misdemeanor. The offense is found in Section 106.041 of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code. Essentially, DUI is reserved for minors who have any detectible amount of Alcohol in their body. A DWI (Driving while intoxicated) is a class B misdemeanor. The offense is found in section 49.04 of the Texas Penal Code. A person can be charged with DWI, regardless of age, if they a) have lost the normal use of their mental or physical faculties or b) have an alcohol concentration over the legal limit of 0.08. For a more in-depth explanation of the difference between DWI and DUI, see the article below written by my law partner Hunter Biederman. You can view Hunter’s Blog at www.friscodwilawyer.com.

By Frisco DWI Lawyer Hunter Biederman

In Texas, DWI, or Driving While Intoxicated (1st), is a crime that can carry with it up to 180 days in jail, and up to a $2,000 fine. DWI carries with it a harsher punishment and penalties than DUI. In order for the state to convict someone of DWI, they must prove that the driver of a motor vehicle either had above a .08 BAC, or lost the normal use of their mental or physical faculties due to the introduction of alcohol, a drug, or a combination of the two. You can receive a DWI at any age (above or below 21). With each conviction, the punishment & ramifications of a conviction go up.

In Texas, DUI, or Driving Under the Influence is a crime that can only be committed by a minor under 21. The controlling statute is the Alcohol Beverage Code § 106.041. In order for the state to prove that you are Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol, the state must prove you were a motor vehicle in a public place while having any detectable amount of alcohol in the minor's system. BUT, if the police believe that you are above a .08 BAC, or you have lost the normal use of your mental or physical faculties, you may end up getting arrested for DWI, the more serious of the two crimes.

I have created the chart below to help explain the differences. No matter which crime you are charged with, DWI or DUI, the ramifications can be extraordinary. This is especially true for what can happen outside of the punishment ranges. Drivers License suspensions, future loans or employers, may see your record, and future criminal proceedings may be enhanced.

To view a DWI, DUI punishment chart, click here.

Posted On: September 28, 2008

It was a great week for DWI attorney Troy Burleson’s clients. By Plano DWI lawyer Troy P. Burleson

By Collin County DWI attorney Troy P. Burleson
It was a great week for the Law Office of Troy Burleson and my cleints. I tell clients all the time that there is very little downside to setting DWI cases for trial. The past week was a great example of why that is the case. Last week, three of my clients were found NOT GUILTY after trial, two of my clients' cases were DISMISSED and the state offered one of my clients a last minute plea deal on a DWI case in which my client had an accident and a breath test score of 0.220. The plea deal included NO PROBATION, NO JAIL TIME and NO COMMUNITY SERVICE. The original plea offer on this case was 5 days in jail, a probationary term of 24 month and 80 hours of community service. Evidentiary problems forced the prosecution to offer this unusually lenient plea deal.

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Posted On: September 27, 2008

If I give a breath sample under 0.08 the officer will let me go, Right? WRONG! By Plano DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson

By Collin County DWI Attorney Troy P. Burleson

If you are suspected of drunk driving, you will probably be asked to give a sample of your breath to determine your alcohol concentration. The question most people ask is, "If I give a sample under the legal limit of 0.08, will the officer let me go?” The answer is NO. Even if you give a breath sample below the legal limit of 0.08, you will still be charged with DWI.

Continue reading " If I give a breath sample under 0.08 the officer will let me go, Right? WRONG! By Plano DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson " »

Posted On: September 17, 2008

Right to Refuse a Breath Text in a Texas DWI: By Plano DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson

by Collin County DWI Attorney Troy P. Burleson

If an officer suspects you of drunk drinking you will probably be asked to submit to a breath test. As we have reported here before, there are many problems with the reliability of the breath test machine used by the State of Texas, the Intoxilyzer 5000. That being said, the question I get asked most often is, “If an officer asks me to take a breath test, do I have to?” The answer is absolutely NOT!!

Texas has what is known as the “Implied Consent Rule” regarding breath or blood tests. Most people have no idea that as a condition of being issued a Texas Driver’s License, they have given “implied consent” that they would submit to a breath or a blood test if requested by an officer during an investigation for drunk driving. However, the statutes that control the” Implied Consent Rule” in Texas specifically state that a person may withdraw their “implied consent” at any time and refuse to comply with an officer’s request for a breath or blood test. For a more detailed explanation of these statutes, see my previous article here.

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Posted On: September 12, 2008

False Breath Test Results and GERD. By Plano DWI Attorney Troy P. Burleson

By Collin County DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson

There are many valid legal defenses to a failed breath test in a Texas DWI case. We have reported some of those defenses here. One of the most overlooked defenses by attorneys who do not focus on DWI cases involves a medical concept known as Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD). GERD is a condition of the stomach that can have a profound effect on the results of a breath test. Below is a great article by California DUI Lawyer Lawrence Taylor. Attorney Taylor is one of the nations leading authorities on breath testing and DUI/DWI law. To visit his website, click here.

Here is Attorney Lawrence Taylor article on GERD.

GERD, Acid Reflux and False Breathalyzer Results by Lawrence Taylor

Bryan is presently facing criminal charges for driving under the influence of alcohol. Except that he wasn’t under the influence of alcohol. He had one drink after work and was stopped at a DUI sobriety checkpoint on the way home. The officer smelled the alcohol on his breath and asked Bryan to step out of the car to take some field sobriety tests. He did fairly well on the tests but, to be sure, the officer asked him to breathe into the breath machine that had been set up at the checkpoint. The results: .09%. Bryan was arrested for DUI, handcuffed and taken to jail; his license was immediately confiscated and he was served with a notice of automatic suspension. When finally released six hours later, he was given a notice to appear in court for arraignment on drunk driving charges.

What happened? How could Bryan have only consumed one beer but registered .09% on the machine — at least four times higher than would be expected?

Well, to begin with, breath machines (commonly referred to as “Breathalyzers”, although there are many competing makes and models) are notoriously inaccurate and unreliable. Calibration, maintenance, repair and use by inexperienced or poorly trained officers are always problems. And there are inherent design defects, such as being “non-specific” for alcohol — that is, they don’t actually measure alcohol; due to the nature of infrared analysis, they will report thousands of other compounds as “alcohol”. Another recurring problem is “mouth alcohol”.

What is “mouth alcohol” — and how could this have caused Bran’s false reading? The machine measures alcohol on the breath, and an internal computer then multiplies the reading 2100 times to get a reading of alcohol in the blood. This is because the amount of alcohol in the blood is greatly reduced as it crosses from the blood into the alveolar sacs of the lungs and into the breath; the average person has 2100 times more alcohol in his blood than in his breath (this varies widely among individuals, however, and is another inherent defect in the machines).

But what if the alcohol in the breath sample did not come from the lungs? What if the alcohol came from Bryan’s mouth or throat? Then it will not have been processed through the body, into the blood and finally out through the lungs — and it will not have been reduced 2100 times. But the machine, being a machine, will always multiply it 2100 times. Result: false high reading and Bryan is facing DUI charges.

So what was alcohol doing in Bryan’s mouth or throat?

Well, alcohol will usually stay in the tissue of the oral cavity or esophagus for about 15 minutes until it is finally diluted and flushed down into the stomach by saliva. So if Bryan had “one for the road” just before being tested, he could have a problem. Or the alcohol could have become trapped in dentures or gum cavities and lasted much longer. Bryan may have burped or belched within 15 minutes before taking the test, sending up alcohol from the beer in his stomach into his mouth and esophagus. But what actually happened was that Bryan suffers from a very common condition: GERD, or “gastroesophageal reflux disease”. This causes “acid reflux”, often experienced as heartburn.

Acid reflux is commonly caused by a “hiatal hernia” – damage to the pyloric valve separating the stomach from the esophagus. When the valve cannot close completely, then liquids and gasses from the stomach can rise into the throat and oral cavity, to remain there until once again flushed back down. Since a bout of acid reflux can be caused by stress, it is not unusual to find that people stopped by police officers for suspicion of DUI and subjected to field sobriety tests experience the condition.

Bryan is now ordered to breathe into the machine’s mouthpiece. With alcohol from his stomach now rising into and permeating his mouth and throat, it is mixed with the breath passing from the lungs through the throat and mouth and into the machine. Since this alcohol is being multiplied by the machine 2100 times, it takes only a tiny — invisible — amount of absorbed alcohol to cause a disproportionately high reading. In Bryan’s case, an “innocent” reading of perhaps .02% became a “guilty” .09%. And Bryan lost his driver’s license….and now has to try to prove his innocence in court.

Prove his innocence? Aren?t we presumed innocent in America? Here we have the notorious “DUI exception to the Constitution” again. Strangely, Bryan is not presumed to be innocent as we all thought: almost all state laws legally presume a person is under the influence of alcohol if if the machine’s reading is .08% or higher.

Yes, we have a system where citizens are convicted by a machine….A very fallible machine.

Posted On: September 1, 2008

DWI Breath Test and the Atkins Diet. by Plano DWI Lawyer Troy P. Burleson

By Collin County DWI attorney Troy P. Burleson

If you have recently been charged with DWI in Texas and were on the Atkins or a similar low-carb diet at the time of your arrest, you may have a valid legal defense to a failed breath test. I have written about the effects of low-carb diets on the Intoxilyzer here before. Below, I have attached an article from Austin DWI lawyer Kenny Gibson. Mr. Gibson is one of the most well-know and respected DWI lawyers in the State of Texas. One of his associates, Darren McDowell and I worked in the same law firm in Dallas before he moved to Austin to work with Kenny. I hope you find the article informative. If you or someone you love has been arrested in the Austin, Texas area for DWI contact Darren McDowell or Kenney Gibson at www.austindwiattorney.com.

By Austin DWI Lawyer Kenny Gibson

A Virgin Atlantic Pilot found out the hard way that the Adkins diet can affect the breath test when he was removed from a transatlantic flight after failing a breathalyser test. He has finally been cleard of this charge after it was discovered that his low-carbohydrate diet triggered a false reading.

Subsequent blood tests on the pilot showed a blood-alcohol reading of just over a fifth of the limit set for airline pilots - which in turn is a quarter of the drink-drive level.

The pilot’s nightmare began when he went through the security checks for flight crew one of the guards thought he could smell alcohol on his breath.

The pilot was allowed to board the plane but about 45 minutes before take-off police got on the aircraft and breathalysed the pilot in the cockpit using a machine calibrated to aviation levels. The pilot failed this test and was escorted off the plane.

A standby crew was called and the pilot was taken to the police station, where blood tests were taken.

He was suspended from duty and released on bail.

The pilot’s blood was sent it to a laboratory where they found only a minimal blood alcohol reading. After the lab tested two more samples, he was exonerated.

Even non-drinkers are capable of producing trace elements of alcohol in their bloodstream, which would explain the level in the pilot’s blood.

The breathalyser reading was attributed to the pilot’s low–carbohydrate diet, which can affect the smell of a person’s breath and their metabolism.

Breathalysers mainly detect ethanol (the type of alcohol found in drinks) But some machines are unable to distinguish ethanol from acetone, a chemical that is produced by people on low-carbohydrate diets such as the Atkins diet. In normal circumstances this is not a problem but with the alcohol limit in the aviation industry is set at about a quarter of the normal “intoxication” level (.02) even these traces can result in a positive reading.

Where this is most likely to cause problems is when a person has been drinking, but not to the level of being intoxicated (.08). You then add the fact that the person is on a low carbohydrate diet, which will produce acetone in their breath, and there is a strong likelihood you will end up with a unreliable result from the breath testing machine.