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==Overview==
==Overview==
[[File:Crashed Honda Accord.jpg|thumb|left|The driver of this car was under the influence of alcohol and drove into a small guard house in [[Malaysia]]]]
[[File:Crashed Honda Accord a.k.a asian pride car.jpg|thumb|left|The driver of this car was under the influence of alcohol (probably wasnt just awful driver cause there asian0 and drove into a small guard house in [[Malaysia]]]]


In most countries, anyone who is convicted of injuring or killing someone while under the influence of alcohol or drugs can be heavily fined, as in [[France]], in addition to being given a lengthy prison sentence. Many states in the U.S. have adopted [[truth in sentencing]] laws that enforce strict guidelines on sentencing. For example, if a defendant is sentenced to ten years, he or she will be in prison for that entire time. This is different from past practice where prison time was reduced or suspended after sentencing had been issued.
In most countries, anyone who is convicted of injuring or killing someone while under the influence of alcohol or drugs can be heavily fined, as in [[France]], in addition to being given a lengthy prison sentence. Many states in the U.S. have adopted [[truth in sentencing]] laws that enforce strict guidelines on sentencing. For example, if a defendant is sentenced to ten years, he or she will be in prison for that entire time. This is different from past practice where prison time was reduced or suspended after sentencing had been issued.


The specific criminal offense may be called, depending on the jurisdiction, '''driving under intense influence''' (''DUII''), '''driving while intoxicated''' (''DWI''), '''operating while intoxicated''' (''OWI''), '''operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated''' (''OMVI''), '''driving under the influence''' [of alcohol or other drugs] (''DUI''), '''driving under the combined influence of alcohol and/or other drugs''', '''driving under the influence per se''' or '''drunk in charge''' [of a vehicle]. Other less common acronyms include ("OVI"), "operating a vehicle (while) impaired," and ("DWAI"), "Driving While Ability Impaired."<ref>For a complete list of impaired driving acronyms, see http://www.duiattorney.com/dui-basics/dui-terminology</ref> Many of such laws apply also to [[boating]], piloting aircraft, riding a horse or conducting a horse-drawn vehicle, or cycling.
The specific criminal offense may be called, depending on the jurisdiction, '''driving under intense influence''' (''DUII''), '''driving while intoxicated ''' (''DWI''), '''operating while intoxicated''' (''OWI''), '''operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated''' (''OMVI''), '''driving under the influence''' [of alcohol or other drugs] (''DUI''), '''driving under the combined influence of alcohol and/or other drugs''', '''driving under the influence per se''' or '''drunk in charge''' [of a vehicle]. Other less common acronyms include ("OVI"), "operating a vehicle (while) impaired," and ("DWAI"), "Driving While Ability Impaired."<ref>For a complete list of impaired driving acronyms, see http://www.duiattorney.com/dui-basics/dui-terminology</ref> Many of such laws apply also to [[boating]], piloting aircraft, riding a horse or conducting a horse-drawn vehicle, or cycling.


Historically, guilt was established by observed driving symptoms, such as weaving; administering [[field sobriety test]]s, such as a walking a straight line heel-to-toe or standing on one leg for 30 seconds; and the arresting officer's subjective opinion of impairment. The US Department of Transportation explains the Field Sobriety Test as, "a battery of three tests administered and evaluated in a standardized manner to obtain validated indicators of impairment and establish probable cause for arrest."<ref>SFST:Training Management System. http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/People/injury/alcohol/SFST/appendix_a.htm</ref> Starting with the introduction in Norway in 1936 of the world’s first [[per se]] law which made it an offense to drive with more than a specified amount of alcohol in the body, objective chemical tests have gradually supplemented the earlier purely judgmental ones. Limits for chemical tests are specific for blood alcohol concentration or concentration of alcohol in breath.
Historically, guilt was established by observed driving symptoms, such as weaving; administering [[field sobriety test]]s, such as a walking a straight line heel-to-toe or standing on one leg for 30 seconds; and the arresting officer's subjective opinion of impairment. The US Department of Transportation explains the Field Sobriety Test as, "a battery of three tests administered and evaluated in a standardized manner to obtain validated indicators of impairment and establish probable cause for arrest."<ref>SFST:Training Management System. http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/People/injury/alcohol/SFST/appendix_a.htm</ref> Starting with the introduction in Norway in 1936 of the world’s first [[per se]] law which made it an offense to drive with more than a specified amount of alcohol in the body, objective chemical tests have gradually supplemented the earlier purely judgmental ones. Limits for chemical tests are specific for blood alcohol concentration or concentration of alcohol in breath.

Revision as of 15:25, 3 June 2010

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Sobriety checkpoint in Germany

Driving under the influence of alcohol (driving while intoxicated, drunk driving, operating under the influence, drinking and driving, drink-driving, impaired driving) or other drugs, is the act of operating a vehicle (including bicycle, boat, airplane, wheelchair, or tractor) after consuming alcohol or another drugs. It is a criminal offense in most countries.

Overview

File:Crashed Honda Accord a.k.a asian pride car.jpg
The driver of this car was under the influence of alcohol (probably wasnt just awful driver cause there asian0 and drove into a small guard house in Malaysia

In most countries, anyone who is convicted of injuring or killing someone while under the influence of alcohol or drugs can be heavily fined, as in France, in addition to being given a lengthy prison sentence. Many states in the U.S. have adopted truth in sentencing laws that enforce strict guidelines on sentencing. For example, if a defendant is sentenced to ten years, he or she will be in prison for that entire time. This is different from past practice where prison time was reduced or suspended after sentencing had been issued.

The specific criminal offense may be called, depending on the jurisdiction, driving under intense influence (DUII), driving while intoxicated (DWI), operating while intoxicated (OWI), operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (OMVI), driving under the influence [of alcohol or other drugs] (DUI), driving under the combined influence of alcohol and/or other drugs, driving under the influence per se or drunk in charge [of a vehicle]. Other less common acronyms include ("OVI"), "operating a vehicle (while) impaired," and ("DWAI"), "Driving While Ability Impaired."[1] Many of such laws apply also to boating, piloting aircraft, riding a horse or conducting a horse-drawn vehicle, or cycling.

Historically, guilt was established by observed driving symptoms, such as weaving; administering field sobriety tests, such as a walking a straight line heel-to-toe or standing on one leg for 30 seconds; and the arresting officer's subjective opinion of impairment. The US Department of Transportation explains the Field Sobriety Test as, "a battery of three tests administered and evaluated in a standardized manner to obtain validated indicators of impairment and establish probable cause for arrest."[2] Starting with the introduction in Norway in 1936 of the world’s first per se law which made it an offense to drive with more than a specified amount of alcohol in the body, objective chemical tests have gradually supplemented the earlier purely judgmental ones. Limits for chemical tests are specific for blood alcohol concentration or concentration of alcohol in breath.

First German driving school in 1906, Aschaffenburg

With the advent of a scientific test for blood alcohol content (BAC), enforcement regimes moved to pinning culpability for the offense to strict liability based on driving while having more than a prescribed amount of blood alcohol, although this does not preclude the simultaneous existence of the older subjective tests. BAC is most conveniently measured as a simple percent of alcohol in the blood by weight. It does not depend on any units of measurement. In Europe it is usually expressed as milligrams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood. However, 100 milliliters of blood weighs essentially the same as 100 milliliters of water, which weighs precisely 100 grams. Thus, for all practical purposes, this is the same as the simple dimensionless BAC measured as a percent. Since 2002 it has been illegal in all 50 US states to drive with a BAC that is 0.08% or higher.

The validity of the testing equipment/methods and mathematical relationships for the measurement of breath and blood alcohol have been criticized. (Taylor 2007)

Driving while consuming alcohol may be illegal within a jurisdiction. In some it is illegal for an open container of an alcoholic beverage to be in the passenger compartment of a motor vehicle or in some specific area of that compartment. In some it may be illegal to be asleep in the driver's seat of a vehicle without any intention to drive.[3]

The German model serves to reduce the number of accidents by identifying unfit drivers and removing them from traffic until their fitness to drive has been established again. The Medical Psychological Assessment (MPA) works for a prognosis of the fitness for drive in future, has an interdisciplinary basic approach and offers the chance of individual rehabilitation to the offender.[4]

George Smith, a London taxi driver, was the first person to be convicted of drunk driving, on 10 September 1897. He was fined 20 shillings.

Penalties and defense

A signboard attempts to discourage drivers from drunk driving in Karnataka, India.

In the penalties for drunk driving have steadily increased throughout the past years as organizations such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving have lobbied for stiffer penalties. Higher fines and penalties have increased the importance of proper legal defense when cited for drunk driving.[5] "DUI defense", a branch of criminal defense law, involves attorneys, investigators and forensic toxicologists who attack prosecution evidence on behalf of accused DUI offenders. Generally, DUI attorneys seek to elucidate inaccuracies in forensic breath and blood testing as well as bias, inexperience and incompetence by arresting officers.[6] It's not uncommon for DUI charges to be plea bargained into lesser offenses or sometimes dismissed through legal technicalities or jury trial acquittals.

In California Section 23152 states: It is unlawful for any person who is under the influence of any alcoholic beverage or drug, or under the combined influence of any alcoholic beverage and drug, to drive a vehicle.[7] The law also state that any person convicted of the violation is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished upon conviction by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) or by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six months, or by both that fine and imprisonment.

Evidence from Public Health Law Research

Public Health Law Research[8], an independent organization, published in 2009 several evidence briefs summarizing the research assessing the effect of a specific law or policy on public health, that concern the effectiveness of various laws related to drunk driving .

There is strong evidence supporting the effectiveness of selective breath testing sobriety checkpoints as a public health intervention aimed at reducing the harms associated with alcohol impaired driving.[9]

There is strong evidence that laws adopting decreased blood alcohol content levels for drunk drivers under age 21 effectively reduce alcohol-related motor-vehicle deaths.[10]

There is strong evidence that laws adopting decreased blood alcohol content levels and per se BAC laws set a blood alcohol limit at which an individual is considered legally impaired (i.e., impairment is “per se” because actual inability to function need not be established), effectively reduce alcohol-related motor-vehicle deaths.[11]

There is strong evidence to support the effectiveness of a minimum legal drinking age of 21 years as an intervention aimed at reducing alcohol involved motor vehicle crashes.[12]

Ignition interlock programs are an effective public health intervention aimed at reducing drunk-driving recidivism. However, the intervention is only effective while the devices are attached (the reduction in repeat offense rates disappears after the devices are removed)[13]

Drunk driving law by country

The laws relating to drunk driving vary between countries and varying blood alcohol content is allowed before a conviction is made.

See also

References

  1. ^ For a complete list of impaired driving acronyms, see http://www.duiattorney.com/dui-basics/dui-terminology
  2. ^ SFST:Training Management System. http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/People/injury/alcohol/SFST/appendix_a.htm
  3. ^ http://www.startribune.com/local/41754752.html
  4. ^ Müller & Laub 2006. The Medical Psychological Assessment: An Opportunity for the Individual, Safety for the General Public
  5. ^ Henry. "DUI Defense". DUI Defense Online. Retrieved 2010-01-09.
  6. ^ 20 defense strategies in a DUI case
  7. ^ California DUI Laws
  8. ^ Public Health Law Research
  9. ^ Selective Breath Testing Sobriety Checkpoints, Public Health Law Research 2009
  10. ^ Zero Tolerance BAC Laws for Drunk Drivers Under Age 21, Public Health Law Research 2009
  11. ^ Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) Per Se Laws, Public Health Law Research 2009
  12. ^ Setting the Minimum Legal Drinking Age at 21 Years, Public Health Law Research 2009
  13. ^ Ignition Interlock Laws for Convicted Drunk Drivers, Public Health Law Research 2009

External links