Lawrence Taylor’s Speech on “The DUI Exception to the
Constitution”
"Mediocrity finds safety in standardization."
- Frederick
Crane
[The following lecture, given to a group of
businessmen in Washington state several years ago, is ADAPTED
(with some minor editing) from the web site of the “Dean” of
DUI defense, Lawrence Taylor of Long Beach, California.
It is re-printed here with Larry’s express permission.]
See <www.duicenter.com>.
I hope to convince you in the next hour, some of you,
convince some of you, in the next hour that the greatest
single threat to our freedoms, the freedoms set forth in our
Bill of Rights to our constitution. The single greatest threat
is not from China. I don’t think it’s from Afghanistan. I
don’t think it’s from the extremists of the Muslim world. The
threat as it has always been throughout history is
internal.
It is from within. I do not think it is from the
American Communist party or extremists on the right. I hope to
convince a few of you the greatest single threat to our
freedoms today is a group of American housewives. They call
themselves the Mothers Against Drunk Driving, MADD.
I am fully aware that some of you belong to MADD. And I am
certainly not here to make fun. Many of you who are in MADD
are--have had tragic losses at the hands of drunk drivers.
Others of you here do not belong to MADD, but you have
contributed to MADD and many more of you here, perhaps most of
you here, are in complete sympathy with their goals and their
activities. But I hope to convince you after one hour that you
might want to reassess your view of that particular
organization.
And I do not take them lightly in terms of their
intentions. But we know that throughout history it is the
well-intentioned zealots--those who believe strongly in the
rightness of their cause--that are most willing to impose
those ideas upon others. I do not, by the way, for a moment
suggest that we should legalize drunk driving. I'm going to
make that clear at the outset. But it is the true believer who
is the greatest threat. And I should at the outset acknowledge
my tremendous debt to Mr. Eric Hoffer who wrote the book,
The True Believer. He was a longshoreman when I was going
to school at Berkeley in the 60’s. He did not have a high
school education, but was teaching Philosophy at the
University of California Berkeley and wrote this tremendous
little jewel of a book that has been terribly influential in
my own thinking.
I would like you to imagine for a moment that you’ve gone
to a friend’s house for dinner. In the course of a very good
dinner you’ve had a couple of glasses of a good Shiraz and it
is now time to drive home. I would like you to imagine that
you are on your way home--and, I will tell you
parenthetically, by the way, that two glasses of wine will
not, in any state, put you under the influence of alcohol or
over the legal limit of .08, or .10 depending on your home
state. As you are driving along the highway, you see ahead of
you some flashing lights and barricades and police cars
accordioned across the highway, with flashing lights directing
you into an increasingly small channel. And, as you go in, you
are stopped and two police officers approach you and stick a
flashlight in your face and say, "Breath on me. Have you been
drinking tonight? Please step out of the car."
Some of you say, "Well that can’t happen in the United
States. We have the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution,
which says, 'police officers have to have probable cause to
stop you. They have to have a reason to believe you’ve done
something criminal before they can stop and detain you.'" And
so said the Michigan Supreme Court in the case of Sitz
versus Michigan. The Supreme Court of Michigan said, "The
Fourth Amendment does not permit these types of roadblocks."
And reversed the DUI conviction. They went up to the United
States Supreme Court, unfortunately, and that august body
decided 5 to 4 that somewhere in the Constitution there is
something called a DUI Exception. And in a 5 to 4 vote sent it
back to Michigan saying there is no violation here. What’s
interesting is the Michigan Supreme Court; bless them, for
there are fewer and fewer of them, said, "Well, if you will
not protect our citizens in the state of Michigan from this
kind of police conduct, we will. And we again reverse the
conviction and this time we rely upon our own state
constitution."
The state of Washington and three other states have
followed suit. In 46 states today it is legal to stop you for
absolutely no reason other than the fact that you are driving
a car. The only purpose is to check you out for drunk driving.
You have been stopped, you have been taken out of the car
and you have been handcuffed. You are placed in a police
vehicle and you are on your way back to the police station.
About this time you’re probably wondering--I’ve seen this TV
show somewhere--they’re supposed to read me something aren’t
they? Something called Miranda? Aren’t I supposed to have a
right for an attorney? Don’t I have the right to remain
silent? That becomes an issue because, as you’re being driven
to jail, the officer's asking you all kinds of questions.
Like, "Where have you been?" "Where are you coming from?" "How
much have you had to drink?" "How long ago was it?" "When was
the last drink?" "Do you feel the effects?" "Where are you
now?" "What time of day is it?"
Well, again, a state Supreme Court said, "Hey, this
person’s handcuffed and under arrest, you’ve got to advise him
of his constitutional rights under Miranda." And again, it
went to the United States Supreme Court in the case of
Berkemer vs. McCarty in 1984. The Michigan vs. Sitz
case was 1990, by the way. In Berkemer vs. McCarty, the
United States Supreme Court fooled around for about 20 or 30
pages of opinion and finally concluded that there was a
DUI exception to the constitution. And that, "Well, we
really can’t tell you when you’re supposed to give Miranda in
a DUI case. We do know that it is later than in other types of
criminal investigations." So, U.S. Supreme Court has told us
we don’t know when Miranda is supposed to be given in DUI
cases, but it is clearly some time later.
Well, about this time you arrive at the police station and
the officer takes you into a room and there is this little
metal box about the size of an IBM typewriter. Some of you may
remember those. And he says breathe in here. And you say,
"Wait a minute, I have a right to an attorney. Can I make a
phone call?" "No", says the officer. And, he’s right. However,
this denial of access to an attorney is only applicable in DUI
cases. He’s right. You’re about to give the most incriminating
evidence possible to give in a DUI case and you have no right
to seek the advice of an attorney as to whether to breathe
into that machine or to agree to submit to a urine or a blood
test, in the alternative.
And I’m only touching on a few of the problems. In
California, for example, and in many other states, the law
says you have a right to choose between breath, blood and
urine. It is your choice. We have discovered in California,
however, through our own Supreme Court that when the officer
doesn’t give you that choice--just makes you breathe into that
little black box--that’s okay. They’re not supposed to do it,
but there’s no remedy. There’s nothing that can be done about
it, so says the California Supreme Court. You can’t suppress
the evidence. Police are not stupid, so now about half of them
simply don’t give you that choice, since nothing’s going to
happen if they don’t. So, you find out that you have no right
to consult with an attorney.
Your next thought is, "I don’t know if I trust that little
machine. Maybe I should refuse to breathe into it. I think I’m
okay because, because as I remember, there’s a Fifth Amendment
right in the United States Constitution that I don’t have to
incriminate myself, and, not only that, but if it goes to
trial, the prosecutor cannot even refer to the fact that I’ve
exercised my Fifth Amendment right."
The South Dakota Supreme Court, in Neville vs. South
Dakota agreed a few years ago and they said, "This
gentleman refused to incriminate himself by breathing into
that machine and it was reversible error for the prosecutor to
comment upon that to the jury and tell them that he refused,
because he knew he was guilty." Now you’re probably ahead of
me, guessing the outcome here. It went to the United States
Supreme Court. The United States Supreme Court, in South
Dakota vs. Neville in 1983 said, "There’s a DUI
exception to the Fifth Amendment. There is no right to
refuse and the prosecution can comment freely in trial upon
that refusal." And they sent it back to South Dakota. And
South Dakota said, "If you in Washington, DC will not protect
our citizens, we will rely upon our own state
constitution," and they reversed it again based upon the
South Dakota constitution’s provisions against
self-incrimination. Unfortunately, that’s the last story I
have of the State Supreme Court exercising protections of its
own citizens.
So, you decide you’re going to breathe into that machine.
And you do. You breathe into one end and out comes a piece of
paper at the other end that says your blood-alcohol
concentration is 0.13. Now, at this point, in most states, the
police are supposed to give you a choice as to whether you
want urine or a blood saved as well, so that you have
something for your defense attorney to examine with an
independent analysis rather than rely upon a crime lab of that
very same law enforcement agency.
This is called the Trombetta Advisement. They don’t give it
usually. They’re supposed to, but if they don’t, no harm, no
foul and so it is rarely done. It’s called the Trombetta
Advisement because a few years ago, in 1984, a defendant in
California said, "Wait a minute, that machine captured my
breath and minutes after analyzing it, just purged it into the
room air. It could have saved the breath. (Very easy to do.
Costs about $1.50 per sample utilizing a special kit to just
preserve it.) It could have saved the breath and then my
attorney could have had it analyzed by a separate laboratory
by a more exact and reliable testing method. You have
destroyed evidence that I could have analyzed and may have
been exculpatory."
This went to the United States Supreme Court and in 1984 in
the landmark case of Trombetta vs. California, the
Supreme Court found yet another DUI exception to
the Constitution and said "Well, it would be nice if they
saved the breath, but there’s no obligation to do so. And,
destruction of that evidence, unless you can prove
that it would have been exculpatory, has no impact." So, today
it is all right to destroy the evidence after you get your own
results and make sure the defense doesn’t get access to it.
Finally, you’re rather outraged because you know you’re not
under the influence. You know you’re not over .08, which is
the California standard and the standard in about a third of
the states today. And in 5 years will be the standard in all
of your states because the federal government is telling you
that’s what it’s going to be. And the Mothers Against Drunk
Driving are ensuring that happens.
You decide to go find one of these people completely
without any social value and ask them to represent you in
trial. You want to tell a jury of 12 of your peers what
happened. You want to give your version. So you tell your
attorney, "I want a jury trial." Your attorney says, "I am
really sorry, but you can’t have one. You see we don’t have
jury trials for DUI cases in this state, because in 1989 the
United States Supreme Court in Blanton versus North Las
Vegas, a DUI case, said, "There is no Constitutional right
to a jury trial in a DUI case, so long as it’s not punishable
by more than six months in jail."
So, in several states today, including Nevada, Louisiana,
New Jersey and Hawaii you have no right to a jury trial.
And the Mothers Against Drunk Driving and a few other
organizations are doing everything they can to make sure there
are no jury trial rights in other states as well.
All right, we’ve taken a look at what happens to you as you
go through the process in terms of any Constitutional rights
you thought you had. And if you’d been charged with burglary,
murder, rape, you would have had those rights. At least for
now, until THOSE rights are taken away, utilizing the same
“necessity” argument used for DUI prosecutions.
Now, let’s take a look at what the crime or DUI really is.
What is the offense you just committed? I will tell you, that
when I have clients come in the door, almost none of them know
what the crime is, and probably half of them don’t know if
they’re guilty or not.
In the beginning there was a law. That law said thou shalt
not drive under the influence of alcohol. Period. It was a
good law. We need it. It addressed the problem. It was fair.
Unfortunately, there were some defendants being
acquitted, after they sought trial with a skilled trial
attorney. And so an inventor came along and said, "Well, I’ve
got this super neat little gizmo here. I will call it the
Breathomatic. It’s a box and if you breathe in this end, out
the other end comes this piece of paper and it’ll tell you
exactly how much alcohol is in the person’s blood, which is
telling you about impairment of the brain."
Well, that sounded pretty cool. And so legislators and
prosecutors and MADD approached the American Medical
Association and said, "We’ve got this great machine. Can you
tell us at what level of alcohol concentration a person is
impaired in their ability to drive a vehicle?" And the AMA
said, "After extensive research it is 0.15 grams percent."
This was about 30 years ago... 0.15 percent.
Well, that was okay for a while, but a whole lot of people
STILL were not getting convicted. Part of the problem was
there was only a presumption that you were under the
influence. In other words, the jury could accept if you were
over a .15 that you were under the influence, or they could
reject it and say other evidence shows that he wasn’t under
the influence. Second problem is that a lot of people were
coming in at 0.13, 0.14, 0.12. Third problem is, you were 0.15
at the time of the test in the station, but what were you an
hour earlier when you were driving?
So, those organizations went back to the AMA a few years
later and said, "Are you sure about that 0.15. Couldn’t it
really be a little lower?" And the AMA said, "You know, you’re
right. It’s a 0.10." Now, the human body, to my knowledge, had
not changed in those 20 years, but certainly the American
Medical Association’s research did. And replied to
considerable political pressure. So, now jurors were told that
they could presume guilt if there was a .10%. A dramatic
change in “the number”.
Unfortunately, there were still skilled criminal defense
lawyers out there and there were still acquittals, and the
Mothers Against Drunk Driving, a very effective, very well
financed organization, as some of you here know, was very
successful by working through a federal agency called National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration in putting pressure on
states to FURTHER drop it to .08%. And I indicated earlier,
about a third of the states have done exactly that, the others
are following suit.
Well, there’s no question, there are fewer acquittals now
and the prosecutors were increasing their conviction rate.
But, there were still some acquittals. And so MADD and the
other federal agencies decided to change the law further. More
accurately, MADD came up with another law. This is called
the per se law. If we can’t convince jurors
that a person is under the influence over .08 we can make it a
crime to merely drive while having a BAC over .08. The crime
is being over .08 per se. We don’t care if
they’re intoxicated or impaired. If the person has a BAC level
over .08%, or .10% blood-alcohol perhaps, in your state; that
is a crime. Not only that, let’s keep the original law.
So, now we give the prosecutors two shots to obtain a
conviction whenever a test is taken by a suspect. If
they can’t convince the jury he’s under the influence, well
then maybe they can convince them he was over .08, even though
he was not under the influence and visa versa.
Well, this once again certainly increased the conviction
rate, and the number of acquittals continued to drop. But
there was a problem. Acquittals were still happening.
New, creative and detailed attacks began challenging the
technology involved in breath alcohol analysis. The gist of
the attacks by criminal defense lawyers was based on the
machine, to put it simplistically, assuming that you are
an average person. Okay? It is measuring the breath.
It is supposed to be measuring the alcohol in the vapor of the
alveolar air in the deep lungs that you expel, and is analyzed
in the machine. The machine is telling you how much alcohol is
in the blood. Not in the breath. There is what we call a
partition ratio. To put it simplistically, the machine has
a very primitive Z80 computer inside it. There are different
machines, but the computers will all report, "Well, if you’ve
got this “result” from the breath, there must be
2100 times as much in the blood!” Using a multiplier
inside the little computer, that’s what it prints out.
But the computer is assuming that your
partition ratio is 2100. Problem? Very few people have a
partition ratio of 2100 to 1. It ranges anywhere from about
1100-to-one up to 3500-to-one and higher. And there is no way
of knowing at the time of testing what your partition ratio
was because medical studies have shown that the partition
ratio changes within an individual all the time. One person is
going to be very different than the person sitting next to
him. Your partition ratio tomorrow is going to be different
than what it is right now at this hour. Well, what does that
mean? It means if you blow, let's say, a 0.11 and you
have a 1300-to-one partition ratio, that 0.11 is really 0.07.
You’re innocent. Your crime, unfortunately, was not
being average.
Well, a few defense attorneys were able to master the
technology involved and attorneys usually go to law school
because they failed physics, chemistry and so on in college.
But, a few of these defense attorneys were actually learning
how this machine worked. And they thought, "Whoa! There’s an
assumption here, 2100-to-one," and they cross-examined the
expert from the law enforcement’s crime lab and said, "Isn’t
it a fact?" And the guy would hem and haw and so on, and say,
"Well, yeah." Acquittal. The 2100 to 1 ratio
issue is still a viable defense in a lot of states.
Not in California anymore. In California, our Supreme
Court, which is slightly to the right of the U.S. Supreme
Court, said, "No, not really because see what you’re doing is
you’re measuring the alcohol on the breath. You’re not
measuring the blood directly, you’re measuring on the breath,
and therefore we don’t have to have a partition ratio."
Now, you probably don’t appreciate the complete idiocy of that
statement, because the California Supreme Court did not
understand the technology involved. And it was an eight-to-one
decision. The dissenting justice said, Joyce Kenner had said,
"Do you realize that we just created a new crime called
driving with “alcohol on your breath”? And she was
absolutely right. That’s what the Supreme Court of California
did.
Result? If I now ask a law enforcement crime lab expert on
the stand in front of a jury, "Isn’t it a fact that the
partition ratio you used assumes an average of 2100-to-one?" I
will be held in contempt of court and jailed by the judge. If
I try to bring out the truth, I will be jailed as a criminal
defense attorney. I’m not exaggerating. And I’m telling you
that this is true in approximately four other states. I have
lectured in 36 states to lawyers' groups, bar associations,
and so on, so I’m somewhat familiar with the different states
and their different approaches. All of which are becoming much
more standardized as the Federal Government continues to step
in.
Well, that made things a lot easier for prosecutors to
convict in California. Again, the conviction rate continued to
go up. It became more and more difficult to defend people
accused of drunk driving. I did not say "guilty".
Accused of drunk driving. Well, but there’s still lots of
defenses left, because, as I will I hope I will have time to
get into, this machine is, to say the least, unreliable. But
one of the problems is called retrograde extrapolation.
And I alluded to it earlier.
And that is, well it’s all well and good, he was a 0.11 at
the time that he breathed into the machine at the police
station. But it’s not against the law to be over a 0.08 in a
police station. It’s against the law to drive a car over 0
.08. What was it at the time he was driving?
Well, that caused prosecutors a lot of problems. And so
most states, almost all states, passed a new law with the
assistance of the Mothers Against Drunk Driving. And that law
said, "Any test within three hours that results in a
blood-alcohol reading, it shall be presumed that it was the
same at the time of driving." Even though we know absolutely,
as a matter of science, fact, that that is not true.
Well, that again raised the conviction rate, except it was
a rebuttable presumption. In other words, you could introduce
evidence that that simply wasn’t true. And so now, to make a
depressingly long story short, some states are beginning to
pass laws saying that the crime is having over .08 at the time
you breath into the machine. And they don’t care what you were
when you were driving the car. Notice how we’ve gotten further
and further and further away from the evil we were trying to
cure. And that is: "Were you impaired by alcohol when you were
driving your car?"
Okay. Let’s take a look at this machine. The vast
majority--in most states there is no urine test, and if there
is a blood test, you’re usually not going to have access to it
for later, independent analysis. In the vast majority of
cases, because it’s cheap, easy and fast, you’re going to be
breathing into one of these machines. Let me just give you a
real quick rundown on breath test device “theory”.
Incidentally, the book I wrote on Drunk Driving is about 1200
pages in length, of which nearly 400 pages are just on the
technology of breath machines, so this is going to be very
cursory. But, I think, for purposes of illustrating some of
the problems, it will help.
Basically just taking, as I said, the alveolar air,
injecting it through a tube into a sample chamber and
capturing it in that chamber. It’s a little 81 cc tube.
Nickel-plated in most of the machines. And, by the way, there
are a lot of different manufacturers of these different
machines, different types, but we’ll get into that in a
moment. These machines rust and corrode inside. The sample
chamber gets pitted, it absorbs or retains in these “pockets”
alcohol from previous subjects, and so on. But let’s just say
for purposes of theory it captures a sample, a given volume of
lung air, alveolar air. At one end it has a projector that
projects infrared energy, infrared light, a beam through the
chamber. The light passes through your breath that is passing
through that little chamber. Now, at the other end of the
chamber is a detector that “receives” the light from the other
side. It then measures how much of this infrared energy
gets ABSORBED and does not reach the other side of the
chamber, where the detector is located. It “measures”
this DIMUNITION of light by comparing the original intensity
of the light to the diminished intensity of the light,
multiples it by 2100, and spits out “a number”.
Now the theory of infrared spectroscopy, as applied to DUI
cases, states that there is a part of a compound called the
methyl group and that any compound containing the methyl
group, will absorb the energy from this light wave that is
traveling at 3.61 microns. The theory further holds that one
of those compounds is ethanol, ethyl alcohol.
Molecules of ethyl alcohol contain the methyl group as part of
its structure. It is resonant with this particular frequency
of light wave. So, the more ethyl alcohol in the sample
chamber, the more energy is going to be absorbed, the less
will get through to the receptor, the higher the blood-alcohol
reading will go. Actually, the CONCEPT is fairly simple.
Except, again, it is absorbed not only by ethyl alcohol, but
also by the methyl group in any similar compound.
In other words, it is a stupid machine. It does not
differentiate between ethyl alcohol and any other compound. It
is what we call "non-specific" for ethanol. Any compound on
your breath that contains the methyl group will be detected as
alcohol, and reported as alcohol. If you happen to have 32
different compounds containing the methyl group on your
breath, it not only will report them all as alcohol, it is
cumulative. It will add all of those, including any ethyl
alcohol, and then report it in “a number” as ethanol.
So, do any of these methyl groups exist in the human
breath? There are a number of scientific studies--one of which
indicates that there are 102 different compounds found in the
human breath that can contain the methyl group. So what you
are getting is not necessarily alcohol. What you are getting
is some unknown cumulative reading of any of these compounds
on your breath. If you had been painting a house yesterday,
today you would be registering alcohol on our breath machine.
If you had been using solvents, or thinners or glue or
anything like this, same result. If you had pumped gasoline
into your car and inhaled any of the fumes, hours, even days
later, you could be breathing out vapors containing compounds
with the methyl group in it.
Now the second major problem I’ve already mentioned or
alluded to, and that is the partition ratio. It is becoming
less of a problem as the legal system chooses to pass laws or
make rulings that outlaw, essentially, science.
A third, and this is just the last example I will give you,
is called the mouth alcohol phenomenon. The machine
assumes that the alcohol, or whatever it is measuring comes
from your breath, and that’s why it's multiplying by 2100.
Obviously, if it is getting alcohol directly from your stomach
or your throat or your mouth, it’s going to fool the machine
and the results are going to go extremely high. It would take
a minuscule amount of alcohol in your mouth, throat or stomach
to fool the machine and create a pretty high BAC reading. This
is called the trapped alcohol or mouth alcohol
problem. So, if for example, you burp or belch, and any
gases from your stomach, or you have reflux condition, or a
hiatal hernia, and any of those gases or liquids “come up”
your esophagus, and remnants of the saturated gas will stay
there for about 15 to 20 minutes before saliva dissipates it.
It will be breathed into the machine, if you are being tested.
The machine will report an unknown amount, which will be
falsely high. It does not mean you’re under the influence. It
does not mean you’re REALLY an 0.08. It’s simply that you had
alcohol in your mouth, your throat or your stomach. The police
officers are supposed to guard against this by observing you
for 20 minutes. They are supposed to sit down and watch you
for 20 minutes before giving the test. In all the years that I
have been defending, or for that matter prosecuting, DUIs, I
don’t think I’ve ever encountered an officer who actually did
that. They are far too busy to fool around with things like
that. They will check the box, and SAY they did, but it does
not happen and I’m not sure they could even tell if a belch
DID happen. The 20-minute OBSERVATION period is a safeguard,
but one that the police ignore.
So, these are just three examples. There are hundreds of
things wrong with these machines, not just theoretically, but
applied to the machines themselves. How accurate are they?
They’re accurate--they're close enough for government work.
In California, for example, the standards of accuracy---by
law---are that you MUST have duplicate analysis (two
sequential tests) and each result must be within 0.02% of the
other. That means you'd have to take two tests. If the first
one, just to use a number to make it mathematically easy, if
the first one is 0.10%, the next one has to be 0.08, 0.09,
0.10, 0.11 or 0.12. Think about it: a 40% range of error
is scientifically accurate in a case where the State
must prove your guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
In most states, a 40% range of error is considered to
be “acceptable accuracy”. Good enough for GOVERNMENT
work.
The people that make these machines---and I have never
referred to them as instruments--- the people that make these
machines keep coming out with new models. They’ll come out
with a model and call it “state-of-the-art”, “foolproof”,
“fail-safe”, and then two years later they come out with a new
model that takes care of all of the problems found to have
existed with the first model. Meanwhile 100,000 people
have been tested on the “old” device (which is quietly
“retired” from service), yet none of those convicted can
re-open their guilty pleas, or undo the damage done to their
lives and careers by the MACHINE. Then a competing
breath manufacturing company comes out with a new and improved
model that takes care of the “problems” with their
competitor’s new model. And this is a fairly regular battle of
the manufacturers, year after year.
If you look at the warranties---it is sort of
interesting---none of the breath machine manufacturers
warrant these things
to actually test blood-alcohol. If you read the
warranties, there is no warranty for “fitness for a particular
purpose”. That's a legal phrase. Basically it means they don’t
want to get sued by somebody if there is a false reading.
So they will not even warrant these things to do what they’re
selling them to do. The standard warranty, for a total
breakdown of the device, is about one year--about what your
toaster is warranted for. Similar warranty periods. The
difference between the two machines? Your toaster is
warranted to toast bread.
Okay. Science and law. Right off the bat
we’ve got a problem. Science, if you can define it,
would be, I would say, the systematic pursuit of truth.
The objectives of law are very different. It is a
governmental mechanism for imposing order, structure,
predictability, security, and confidence of the public in its
institutions. The law is not concerned with truth. It is
important to understand the entire DUI field.
To understand it you must understand the difference.
Hundreds of years ago a guy named Galileo said, “the universe
is really not FLAT, the way the Vatican says it is”. You
saw what happened to Galileo. The government, for saying such
things, based on SCIENCE, executed him. Have we
progressed? Not if a lawyer tries to tell the truth to a jury
about the LIMITATIONS of a breath machine, and, in doing so,
is thrown in jail for properly and zealously representing
his/her client. I would say we have not come all that far
since Galileo’s days.
Now lastly, as to what you’re looking at as you imagine
going through these different procedures, I would just very
briefly, as to punishment, rather than going through
all the horrors of DUI punishment today, complexities of
punishment today, other than to say in California you’re
better off as a first offense burglar or for committing felony
grand theft than you are as a first time misdemeanor DUI
offender. At least as a felon, you can request “first offender
treatment”, or possibly “conditional discharge” for some
fairly serious crimes, but such a “record-clearing” solution
is UNAVAILABLE for all DUI offenders.
In closing, I will comment on two things. The Mothers
Against Drunk Driving have been very active recently in trying
to get "Scarlet Letter" laws passed. They almost did it two
months ago in California. Came close. The Scarlet Letter law
is: if you are convicted of a DUI, you must have a big bright
red license plate saying the big scarlet letter “DUI” on it.
Your wife has to drive it. Your kids have to drive it.
You would not be able to rent a car, whatsoever, because the
tag would be lacking your “badge” of dishonor. You must carry
that brand on you, says MADD. It must remain with you for as
long as you drive a car for whatever period of time. It did
not pass last time. But, as MADD knows, there is NEXT
YEAR.
The other comment is about a case many of you may have
heard about in North Carolina. Now, we have never executed
people, we’ve never, until recently, given the death penalty
for a crime unless there was pre-meditation of the offender.
Intention to kill and time to reflect upon that and then to
carry out the plan and cold-bloodedly murder. Some exceptions
have been added: Killing a police officer; multiple murders;
murder by torture; murder for ransom. In North Carolina this
year there was a DUI case involving an accident. Another
person died. It would, in any other case, in another
state, likely be a vehicular manslaughter case.
It was not an intentional act. It was negligent; it may
have been reckless. And the prosecutor sought the death
penalty. The death penalty. Fortunately,
they didn’t get it. My understanding is that the defendant was
convicted of MURDER and only received LIFE IN PRISON, but I
don’t know.
So, in the DUI field you have unfair procedures. You have
false evidence. You have wholesale erosion of rights. But,
some may rationalize, “at least the DUI-caused fatalities are
falling correct?” If you believe the statistics from the
Mothers Against Drunk Driving and National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, that would be correct. If you look at
it more closely, you’ll find they start using terms like
"alcohol-involved", "alcohol-related", and those statistics
start changing to justify what they have been doing for the
last few years. The numbers have been gerrymandered so
that if ANY person involved in ANY way in the “accident” had
ANY alcohol in his/her system (even 0.01 per cent), MADD
counts that (and our federal government counts that) as an
“alcohol-related” death.
So, what is happening in the DUI field? Same thing
that’s always been happening. The real danger to your lives,
to my children and your children’s lives, are from
recidivists. Statistically overwhelmingly, the risk lies with
recidivists. People that have driven drunk repeatedly.
Which is a relatively, despite what MADD says, a relatively
small percentage of those who are arrested. Problem? How do
you reach those people? Can you affect the incidence of death
caused by DUIs by increasing the punishment? As to those
recidivists, and I tell you--no.
You are trying to use the legal system to address what is
at least a medical, perhaps psychological, but in my opinion,
absolutely a genetic problem. Now that sounds like an easy
cop-out for me. I wrote a book about 15 years ago called
Born to Crime, The Genetic Causes of Criminal Behavior,
so I suppose that I am a little bit biased, but I’m basing
what I say upon defending thousands and prosecuting thousands
of DUIs and I’m absolutely convinced that it is genetic in
origin. And I think the studies, and one of the chapters of
that book Born to Crime was devoted to alcoholism--the
studies are overwhelming. If my own experiences with
clients have not been, those studies certainly are. And so
long as you have a system that is geared to behavioral
modification--that is, “we’re going to change his drinking
habits by putting him in jail for six months”, or
deterrence—“we’re going to stop other recidivists from driving
drunk because of the deterrent effect”, then you’re fooling
yourselves.
Do I have an answer? No, I don’t. But I know that
system isn’t working, and in the meantime you are destroying
the Constitutional rights that we’ve all previously enjoyed.
Since 1979, when Candy Lightner started MADD, those
all-important rights have taken a blood bath.
Again, the legal system is not concerned with truth.
And it may come as a shock, but it is not. It is
concerned with order, stability. If the legal
system were seeking truth, the government would not falsely
assume that there’s a 2100 to 1 partition ratio. If the legal
system cared about truth, they would not conclusively
presume that your blood-alcohol was the same “number”
three hours earlier, when the government knows it is
not. If they sought truth, they would recognize that these
machines are non-specific, among other problems. The legal
system is not concerned with justice, either. It is concerned
with expediency, not justice. If they were concerned with
justice, they would not permit roadblocks. They would not
presume guilt. They would not pass laws refuting scientific
truth.
I just said, "They would not presume guilt." That
was another DUI exception to the constitution that I didn’t
tell you about. One other thing the police officer does after
he has you breathe into that machine, if you’re over .08, is
that he immediately grabs your license and confiscates it.
This is another contribution from MADD. Immediate
seizure of the license in about 48 of the states today.
On the spot. Justice administered by the police officer. No
judge. No jury. You are presumed guilty.
Your license is confiscated and you are given a notice of
suspension. What happened to the presumption of innocence?
Well, it’s that DUI exception again. You are presumed
guilty.
To make matters even worse, about 5 years
ago a California “proposition” was placed on the ballot.
The question: “Should we, the people of California, eliminate
our STATE constitutional rights, and only retain those
constitutional rights REQUIRED to be kept by the United States
Constitution?” Amazingly, after a well-financed
television campaign by ultra-right groups who found the
Constitution to be a shield for criminals, the people of
California voted to NOT HAVE ANY STATE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS!
For the first time in recorded human history a democratic
group abandoned hard-earned rights and legal protections that
their forefathers has sweated, bled and died to obtain.
Welcome to America! Welcome to “the
land of the free and the home of the brave.”
|