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Not automatically — and not without a fight. In most states, you have a narrow window (often 7–10 days from arrest) to request an administrative hearing that is entirely separate from your criminal case. Missing that deadline is the single most common mistake people make. Our office files that request the same day you hire us. We have successfully retained driving privileges for clients who were told by the arresting officer they had "no chance" — because administrative hearings have different standards of proof than criminal court, and we know how to use that difference.
Calibration records are among the first things we subpoena — and they are wrong more often than most people realize. Breathalyzer machines must be calibrated on a strict schedule, maintained by a certified operator, and the calibration logs must be preserved. If any link in that chain breaks, the result may be inadmissible. We have had cases where the machine had not been calibrated in over six months, and the prosecution had no choice but to drop the chemical evidence entirely. A BAC reading is not a verdict — it is a number that has to survive cross-examination.
Refusing a field sobriety test — the walk-and-turn, the one-leg-stand, the eye-tracking test — carries no automatic legal penalty in most states, and frankly, those tests are designed to be failed. They are graded subjectively by an officer who has already decided you are impaired. Refusing the roadside breath test (the portable device before arrest) is also typically not a crime, though refusing the official chemical test at the station after arrest triggers implied-consent penalties in most states. The distinction matters enormously, and the officer may not have explained it clearly. We will go through exactly what happened, in sequence, and identify every procedural gap.
A conviction might create a reporting obligation — but an arrest alone almost never does, and a dismissal or reduction typically does not trigger licensing board action. We work with a significant number of clients who hold medical, teaching, commercial driving, or financial licenses, and the strategy in those cases is different from a standard defense: we are simultaneously managing the criminal matter and the regulatory exposure. The goal is not just to minimize criminal consequences — it is to produce an outcome that your licensing board will not act on. We have helped nurses keep their RN licenses, teachers keep their certifications, and CDL holders keep their commercial driving privileges.
A second DUI is a different animal — mandatory minimums apply in most states, license revocation periods are longer, and prosecutors push harder. But "harder" does not mean "hopeless." The same defenses apply: procedural violations, calibration issues, chain-of-custody problems with blood draws, improper stop. We also look closely at the prior conviction — if it was in a different county or state, or if the prior plea was entered without proper advisement of rights, there may be grounds to challenge its use as an enhancement. We have resolved second-offense cases as first-offense equivalents more times than we can count.
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Ask in Your Free Case ReviewWhat we've actually achieved —
across 2,400+ cases.
Figures reflect outcomes over 17 years of practice. Individual results vary based on case facts.
reduced to non-DUI charge
The most common charge — and often the most manageable. Procedural defenses, calibration challenges, and plea negotiations frequently result in reduction to reckless driving, preserving your record.
avoid mandatory jail time
Prosecutors push mandatory minimums, but the same defenses apply. We have resolved second offenses as first-offense equivalents in over half our cases.
felony → misdemeanor reduction
Injury involved, child passenger, or third offense — felony territory requires aggressive early intervention. We have had felony charges reduced to misdemeanors in 38% of cases.
reduced or dismissed
Refusing the chemical test triggers implied-consent penalties, but the criminal case may be weaker without a BAC number. Refusal cases often resolve favorably.
retain CDL after defense
Federal standards apply regardless of state law. CDL holders face a lower BAC threshold and more severe penalties — we specialize in protecting commercial driving careers.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Statistics based on firm's internal case data.
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Arrested tonight?
Don't wait until morning. The 7-day administrative license window starts at arrest, not arraignment.
Seventeen years of courtroom experience, recognized by the institutions that evaluate it.
"I was a prosecutor for six years. I know exactly what they're looking for — and exactly where the case against you is most likely to break."