The government enjoys many advantages in any criminal prosecution – not the
least of which is virtually unlimited resources in money and manpower. When the
government draws a bead on one of its citizens, the experience can be terrifying
for that citizen. The vast majority of DUI defendants are not "criminals";
rather, they are ordinary hard working and law-abiding citizens caught up in the
criminal justice system.
While the government enjoys many advantages in a criminal prosecution, one
advantage your defense team has is that we will always know our case better than
the prosecutor. This superior knowledge comes from thorough pre-trial
investigation. In all cases set for trial, your defense team performs the
following:
Pre-trial Investigations
Physical Inspection of the Arrest Site.
We
will visit and photograph the point of the arrest. Were the field sobriety tests
administered on a smooth, dry and level surface as required by the National
Highway Safety Administration? Or, does that surface resemble the surface of the
moon? Was the walk-and-turn test administered on a designated, visible line or
was this exercise administered on an imaginary line? If the line was
"imaginary," was it a line that the officer was "imagining" or a line that the
defendant was "imagining"?
Interview Prospective Defense Witnesses. Often there will be
persons available who can help the defendant’s case. For example, the
government’s breath testing machine says your blood alcohol level was a .161.
You are a 165 pound male. For you to legitimately have a .161 blood alcohol
level, you would have had to consume 6 to 7 standard drinks. Three people who
were with you on the night of your arrest distinctly remember that you only
consumed two beers! Other witnesses may have been passengers in your vehicle
immediately before you were stopped. These people might be able to testify that
you were driving in a manner consistent with that of a sober and prudent person.
These people need to be interviewed, and those interviews recorded and
transcribed, while the events are fresh in their mind. In turn, these
prospective witnesses can help us raise a reasonable doubt at your trial. When
given the choice of believing a flesh and blood human being versus a machine,
many people are inclined to disregard the machine!