Saturday, August 17, 2013

Everything You Always Wanted to Know about the New York DWI Refusal Case (but were afraid to ask)?




I grew up a child of the 1970s. My curiosity about a great many things fueled my reading materials. Many topics in those days were considered taboo and danger ridden, like sex. I was naturally curious. TV in those days was filed with wholesome images of idyllic family life but nothing about sex. Unlike today, no one was discussing or explaining the birds and the bees.

One of the first books I discovered in my dad’s private dresser drawer was a copy of “Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Sex (but were afraid to ask)” by Doctor David Reuben. 

from Barnesandnoble.com


This book helped me to understand a great many sexual mysteries.  It removed a lot of the myths, fears, and misconceptions I had about sex. It was truly an eye opener.

It is now, 2013 and I feel it is time that attorneys did the same to the criminal system of justice. My goal for this book is to take you behind the curtain of the New York DWI Refusal case. Having a lawyer’s understanding and perspective of the process will hopefully bring you clarity and empower your options.




Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184

Friday, August 16, 2013

Winning the DWI Refusal Book: Table of Contents



Table of Contents

Chapter One: Rambo, Ali, and New York DWI Refusals

Chapter Two: The Seven Things I Love About DWI Refusal Cases

Chapter Three: The Seven Things I Hate About DWI Refusal Cases

Chapter Four: The Big D in DWI Refusals

Chapter Five: Overview of the Police DWI Investigation

Chapter Six: The Power of “AND” in New York Refusals

Chapter Seven: Using the Mental to Prove Sobriety

Chapter Eight: Police Opinion is a Matter of Degree

Chapter Nine: The Dreaded Instruction

Chapter Ten: The Grand Overview of the Refusal Case

Chapter Eleven: Taking Apart the Government’s Case

Chapter Twelve: The License is the Thing



Thursday, August 15, 2013

CHAPTER ONE Rambo, Ali, and New York DWI Refusals


Are you ready? from punisherspb.com


When I think about defending a DWI refusal case the first word that comes to mind is Attrition. It is a war of attrition between you and the government. Wearing down your opponent has been a clever war and battle strategy for thousands of years.

The legendary boxer Mohammed Ali, and his “Rope a Dope” applied this same principle. He would “float like a butterfly and sting like a bee.” He would dance around the ring, allow the other fighters to wear themselves out throwing punch after punch, using the ropes to absorb his opponents blows, and then pounce on them.

“Ironically, Ali's preparation for the fight, which involved toughening himself up by allowing his sparring partners to pummel him, contributed to observers' sense that Ali was outmatched. When Foreman became tired from the beating he was delivering, Ali regrouped and ended up winning the match.”
From Norman Mailer’s, “The Rumble in the Jungle”


Love this Movie!! from screened.com


One of my favorite screen characters is John Rambo. What makes Rambo so bad a…  is not his fighting ability, it is his ability to survive. One of my favorite parts of the movie “First Blood” is when Colonel Trautman (Rambo’s old leader) tells the sheriff about who and what he is dealing with after Rambo trounces (but doesn’t kill) his men. It Rambo’s ability to adapt to hostile terrain, to be resourceful, and most importantly outlast his opponents.

Col. Trautman: You don't seem to want to accept the fact that you're dealing with an expert  in guerrilla warfare, with a man who's the best! With guns, with knives, with his bare hands! A man who's been trained to ignore pain! To ignore weather! To live off the land! To eat things that would make a billy goat puke! In Vietnam his job was to dispose of enemy personnel...to kill, period! Win by attrition... well Rambo was THE BEST!
                                                            From Rambo, First Blood

By this time you are probably thinking, how does a New York DWI refusal case align and succeed with a Rambo defense?

 
Using Survival Skills with a Survival Knife from knife-depot.com

Your Ability to Defend the Refusal Case = Your Ability to Survive the Refusal Process

To win a refusal case (disprove intoxication) you have to be willing to do what it takes. The prosecutors in most New York State counties are not just pleading them down to the non-criminal violation of VTL 1192 (1) DWAI (Driving While Ability Impaired).

Are YOU willing to commit to the following?

     You must be able to survive without a driver’s license for an indeterminate period of time.

     You must weather the storms and costs of administrative hearings, a suppression hearing, pre-trial motions, and pre-trial conferences.

     You and your attorney must visit the site of your driving and arrest for the map (or the police report) is certainly not the territory.

      You must relive the driving, and the arrest in detail to your attorney.

      You must provide your clothing, your shoes, your medical records, and your health history. They all may provide keys to your defense.

      You must provide your attorney with as much detailed information about you and the night as possible.    

               Ultimately, you must be willing to put yourself and your case to trial.

In the end I believe that New York DWI Refusals are highly defensible cases. This means that given enough effort and time the large majority of cases can result in successful outcomes. 


 Gotta Know Your Instructions from Floridasupremecourt.org


The Importance of Jury Instructions

When defending any criminal case we must always begin with the end in mind. What is it specifically that the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Every New York State charge (Crime/Offense) has a very specific jury instruction.

Understanding what the law demands as proof of a crime and breaking it down into it’s individual parts (elements) allows for a focused defense. Throughout this book I will be referring to the New York State Jury Instructions. Jury instructions are also called charges to the jury. They are read by the judge to the jury. The judge’s role is to GIVE and INSTRUCT the law. The jurors’ role is to FIND the FACTS and APPLY the law as GIVEN. The jury also receives a written copy of these instructions to follow.

The instructions inform the jury about what the law is, and what the definitions of specific legal terms are. Terms like intoxication and impairment have varying definitions culturally but state to state they are specifically defined by law.

The instructions also inform the jury about what types of evidence they should look at and consider in making their ultimate determination of guilt or innocence. The instructions provide explanation and structure to their job as jurors.






Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184












Wednesday, August 14, 2013

CHAPTER TWO Seven Things I Love About NYS DWI Refusals

The Magic Seven from casino.net



1. There is usually only one “criminal” misdemeanor charge. It is New York State VTL 1192 (3), also called “common law” DWI.

2. The government, the prosecutor, aka the DA has to use opinion testimony to prove you were in fact intoxicated, not merely impaired.

3. Intoxication and impairment are really a matter of degree, and highly subjective.

4. The government cannot prove their case against you by any forensic (blood and/or breath) scientific evidence. They do not have a BAC (blood alcohol concentration) number to wave about and prove your alleged consumption. The jury and/or judge does not receive into evidence official and certified blood alcohol concentration documents with numbers and data to study and ponder over.

5. The New York State jury instruction for VTL 1192 (3) is weighted in your favor.

The standard New York Jury Instruction for “common law” DWI Intoxication VTL 1192 (3) is:

A person is in an INTOXICATED condition when such person
has consumed alcohol to the extent that he or she is incapable, to
a substantial extent, of employing the physical and mental abilities
which he or she is expected to possess in order to operate a
vehicle as a reasonable and prudent driver.(emphasis added)
                                                                        NYS Jury Instruction

For the misdemeanor common law intoxication charge the government must prove the following four things:

1. Incapacity (unable)

2. to a substantial extent

3. both mentally and physically

4. to operate (drive) a car as a reasonable and prudent driver

These legal hurdles are neither easy or simple to surmount with merely police opinion evidence.

6. To prove or disprove this charge of Intoxication the jury and/or judge can look at the following based upon the New York State jury instructions:

To determine whether the defendant was intoxicated you may consider all the surrounding facts and circumstances, including, for example:

·         the defendant’s physical condition
·         appearance
·         balance
·         coordination
·         manner of speech
·         the presence or absence of an odor of alcohol
·         the manner in which the defendant operated the motor vehicle
·         opinion testimony regarding the defendant’s sobriety
·         the circumstances of any accident

7. You can see the potential strengths and weaknesses of your DWI refusal case before the trial through the criminal court suppression hearing, and the DMV license refusal hearing. Your defense attorney can see what the law enforcement officers will testify to and about at these hearings. Your defense attorney will also see how the officers testify. This testimony may only be partly based upon discovery documents ie. police reports, so hearings will form a strong foundation to anchor your defense.





Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184






Tuesday, August 13, 2013

CHAPTER THREE Seven Things I Hate about New York Refusals




1. They are labor intensive, and require attention to all the nitty gritty details. Going over and through the arrest in minute detail and reading between the lines takes time.

2. They usually require lots of hearings, motions, and ultimately a trial. These are the kind of cases where playing offense is the best defense.

3. The criminal court hearings, and DMV administrative license hearings will usually take place at different locations, and at different times.

4. The DMV administrative hearings cannot be re-scheduled easily or without penalty to the criminal case. Having an attorney prepared and ready at the first scheduled refusal hearing gets the case off to a great start.

5. The client must usually be able to survive long periods of time with no form of driver’s license and/or privileges.

6. The prosecution is entitled to an extremely damning jury instruction on your consciousness of guilt for refusing to take the breath test. 

7. Your client will have absolutely no driving privileges for one year if you are too successful (all charges dismissed).





Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184





Monday, August 12, 2013

CHAPTER FOUR Why the Big “D” in DWI Rules the Day

             



Assessing the potential strengths, and weaknesses of a 
NYS DWI Refusal case



DWI refusal cases always begin and end with the letter “D.” The first place everyone involved will focus will be the driving. For any Judge and Prosecutor viewing a DWI the driving is public enemy number one. That is why if there was an accident, and if there was alcohol and/or drugs involved, it is automatically assumed to be due to intoxication.

Driving is always the number one element in even a breath/blood test DWI but most especially with a DWI refusal case. The reason for this is everyone’s secondary focus in DWI cases is on “the Number.”

 Judges, prosecutors, and jurors all want to know, “what was the BAC number?” Was it high? Was it low? Was it double the legal limit? Just how “drunk” were they? With the DWI refusal we have NO number, so we are left to focus upon what we do have: Driving and Behavior.

What kind or type of driving behavior do we have in this refusal case?

There are 24 commonly observed driving patterns that signal to the police nighttime impaired motorists. These come from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration booklet- “The Visual Detection of DWI Motorists” (DOT HS 808 677).

Some of the impaired or bad patterns of driving behavior are weaving, straddling lanes, swerving, turning wide radius, drifting, almost hitting cars or railings, stopping abruptly, accelerating rapidly, decelerating rapidly, very slow speed, and/or a slow response to traffic signals and/or the police officer’s signals.

Can your bad driving behavior be attributed to other reasons?

You can be a bad driver, a tired driver, or a distracted driver and display any of these erratic patterns without any alcohol in your system. Was there another non alcohol related reason for your poor driving behavior? Could it have been a lack of sleep, being overly worked/tired, having a cold, sickness and/or an allergy? These conditions can all contribute to bad driving behavior. Sometimes I have used the Big Mac defense. My client was eating while driving. Thank G-d there is no law against that yet but it can be highly distracting to eat a burger, fries, and a shake while navigating a car.

What if we have perfect or pretty good driving pattern?

I believe that if you have a good "D" in a DWI refusal case you are half-way home. Imagine if you will the district attorney presenting a drunk driving case to a judge or jury with NO drunk driving pattern. That’s a good one, a drunk driving case and criminal charge with NO bad driving.

Remember in DWI arrests the police first have to stop a car for PC (probable cause), ie. a valid reason. If the reason for the stop is an equipment violation (broken lights, muffler, registration) then we have absolutely NO bad (drunk) driving. If the reason is speeding or not using a turn signal then fast driving or failure to signal maybe a violation but it is NOT necessarily drunk driving

After looking at the driving behavior in a DWI Refusal case the second place I try to stake my claim of sobriety is on my client’s mental state. Alcohol hits the mind (the brain) before it gets to the other parts of the body. As they say, alcohol goes to your head. Studies from Germany have shown that within six minutes of consumption alcohol begins to affect brain function. Alcohol is also known to be most damaging to this area of the body over time with alcoholic brains being diminished in size.





Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184


















Sunday, August 11, 2013

CHAPTER FIVE Overview of the Police DWI Investigation


Gotta Evaluate the Police Investigation from morerichesdaily.com



The Police Investigation of a DWI case is a process with many stages.

How you perform at each and every stage builds or diminishes your defense of sobriety.



1. The STOP of a Car is the first decision point in their police investigation.

The police may follow you for some time before deciding to stop you. They may want to gather more information, and they may want to note multiple driving infractions. This determination must be balanced with their public responsibility to remove unsafe drivers from the roadway as quickly as possible.

The first test of your sobriety is not a field side sobriety test, it is the STOP of the car.

How fast or slow did you respond to their emergency lights and/or siren. How did you pull your car over? Did you move it to a safe location? Did you park parallel to the curb?

2. The officer’s first contact with you physically, and mentally at roadside sets the stage of their DWI investigation.

Police have to be excellent psychologists. They have to read people, and to read them quickly. Pulling over a motorist is the most dangerous thing a police officer does. They have no idea who they are stopping. You are an unknown to them, and because of that you are suspect. They will be watching your movements, listening to your words, and assessing you for danger. Every question they ask, and every direction they give is taking them away from or towards an arrest decision.
Legally at this stage in their investigation they can command that you get out of your car.

The police begin to use “divided attention” tests in their first contact with you. Which are questions that have an associated mental task and a physical task. Such as, can I have your driver’s license and registration? You must now remember both parts of the question, and retrieve these documents. Alcohol affects the ability to divide the mind’s attention and perform multiple tasks like these.


3. How you exit the car is a demonstration of your balance and coordination.

Those that need assistance in getting out of their car are not starting off on a good foot, no pun intended. If you can get out of your car or truck unassisted, stand up straight, and walk normally that is another indication of sobriety.

4. The next part of their investigation will usually involve the infamous standardized field side police sobriety tests.

Once you are out of the car you may or may not have decided to do their tests. Legally you don’t have to do them. There are only three standardized tests. The word or term standardized is very important here because non-standardized sobriety testing is completely without guidelines, without research, and without basis. It is winging it and winging it don’t cut with proving a legal case beyond a reasonable doubt. Tests in reciting the alphabet, touching your nose, touching your fingers, and the other variants are completely made up nonsense. This type of police stuff must be fun but kinda like the kid game “do as I say but not as I do,” difficult to win.   

 The ONLY STANDARDIZED FIELD SIDE SOBRIETY TESTS are:

1. The walk and turn
2. The stand on one leg
3. HGN (horizontal gaze nystagmus)

What does Standardized testing mean?

Standardized means they must be given, instructed, demonstrated, and scored in a specific way to be valid, and accurate. Every officer, trooper, and deputy must follow these protocols. These tests were designed, commissioned, and approved after years of research and thousands of lab hours. The police can't just make stuff up. The tests were designed by the NHTSA (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) to be used by law enforcement in all fifty states. The purpose of the tests is not to gauge whether a person is drunk, impaired, or intoxicated. The tests were created to reveal drivers with a BAC (blood alcohol concentration) of .10 or more.

The police will usually just note pass or fail as to their tests.

How much or how little you were able to follow police directions, and do what was instructed in the way that they wanted is highly subjective. Bringing out every detail of your performance may score points as to your sobriety. The police standard for stating that you failed is very low. Just two mistakes on any test is a fail. Considering that some tests have over hundred things to do right, maybe your performance of 90% should be considered by those about to judge your sobriety in a court of law.

 
5. The police DWI arrest decision

At each and every stage in the investigation process they are assessing, gathering, recording, and most importantly deciding what they will charge, and when they will charge it. How long did it take them to make the arrest decision (time from stop to arrest)? What did they ask or do within that time period? Was their investigation thorough and complete?




Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184





















Saturday, August 10, 2013

CHAPTER SIX The Power of “AND” in New York Refusals


"AND"


The power of just three little letters.


When looking over the jury instruction for a common law NYS DWI refusal, VTL 1192 (3) one word stands out to me. The word is “AND” and under our case law (remember NYS is a common law state) the definition of intoxication is defined, interpreted, and applied as "physical and mental" incapacity to operate a car as a reasonably prudent driver.

After years of attending DWI/DUI conferences in other states I am more attune to subtle differences in legal definitions. In Texas, their legal definition of DWI is physical OR mental. So in that state either or is a lower hurdle for the prosecution. They can prove one or the other to make out an intoxication case.

To me in the defense of NYS DWI the word "and" has great power and significance. The prosecution’s burden goes to BOTH mental and physical behavior. They must prove both mental incapacity and physical incapacity legally. I can challenge them as to both these elements in hearings and at trial, the mental and the physical. Maybe my client is uncoordinated, imbalanced, and has two left feet but is mentally sharp, alert, and coherent.

The two prominent cases (without BACs) on how to define "intoxication" in NYS DWI are People v. Cruz, 48 NY 2nd 419, and People v. Bradford, 408 NYS 2nd 1013. Both these show how the Courts apply this legal standard "to and in" the real world of mental and physical human behavior.

If the prosecution is without a BAC (blood alcohol concentration) from blood or breath a NYS DWI will need to be proved strictly by the driver's behavior.

Three key elements have resulted in NOT GUILTY convictions in New York DWI Refusal Cases:

1. The motorists were reckless in their driving that either caused an accident or had the substantial likelihood to   

AND


2. The motorists lacked physical coordination (unable to balance, unable to walk steadily)

                        AND

3. The motorists displayed a lack of a rational mental state (could not answer questions intelligibly)

I believe that demonstrating a driver’s rational mental state is a critical factor in disproving intoxicated operation. This mental state defense is an opening for a plea to the reduced (non-criminal) impaired driving (VTL 1192 (1) DWAI Driving While Ability Impaired offense.





Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184















Friday, August 9, 2013

CHAPTER SEVEN Using the Mental to Prove Sobriety

Are you Coherent? from lia.org



What comprises a “good” ie. sober mental state in those that have drank and drove?

I believe that the place to begin in a DWI refusal is by proving mental “coherency.” Coherency is a big word with many layers of subtext. In studying hundreds of cases of impaired and intoxicated drivers I have noted two dominant patterns or processes.

1. Was their thinking in proper quantity, tempo (flow rate), and form (logical coherence)?

2. Did they demonstrate thought that seemed to be retarded or inhibited?

In examining the thought patterns of drivers I look at three primary areas:

·         Was their thinking Clear?

Coherent versus incoherent, cloudy, confused, and/or vague versus specific

·         Was their thinking relevant and/or logical?  

Logical versus illogical statements, relevant and/or irrelevant statements to the topic being discussed.

·         Was their rate of mental flow normal for the situation?

Mental flow is probably the most subjective of the three areas because people all respond or react differently under stress. The stress of being pulled over by the police, being questioned and/or interrogated, being threatened with arrest, and being in custody can be suffocating experiences.
Was your response slow, normal or rapid? What was your reaction to questions?


Ultimately, were your responses to Police questions, Police instructions, and Police directions appropriate?


Originally, born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. My father was a NYS corrections officer, and my mother a waitress. I now live in Ithaca, NY with my wife (of 25 years), and four kids. I have a B.S. in Human Biology, Doctorates in Law and Chiropractic, and a Post Graduate in Acupuncture. I practiced as a Chiropractic Physician in Florida from 1986 to 1995. I graduated law school in 1997, and went on to practice trial law in FL, NY, NJ, and PA. I love practicing criminal defense and injury law within the Finger Lakes Region of New York State.

Over 95% of the cases that I take on are New York DWI defense cases. I am certified as a breath tester by the Department of Transportation, the guidelines of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). I am certified in Field Sobriety Tests, and an active member of the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD). My online materials include over 400 blog posts, dozens of articles, and over 330 informative videos on my youtube channel.

I have co-authored Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York, in both 2011 and 2013. These are West Thomson legal manuals on New York State DWI defense, and focus on the best practices for other lawyers handling a New York DWI case. Included in Strategies for Defending DWI Cases in New York are materials I provide clients, such as my fee agreement and ways to avoid misdemeanor probation. I was selected by Super Lawyers as a Upstate New York 2013 Rising Star in DWI/DUI Defense based on my experience, contributions, and professional standing.



607.229.5184