Many people are unaware that you can
still receive a DUI if you are not under the influence of alcohol. As your
local Phoenix criminal Attorney I am here
to advise you that this is possible. Pursuant to A.R.S. §28-1381 (A)(3), it is illegal to operate a motor vehicle
with a metabolite of illegal or illicit drugs in a person’s body.
Illegal refers to the drugs which we are all familiar with (marijuana, cocaine,
speed, etc.) that are usually illegal for everyone to possess and/or use. An
illicit drug is a prescribed drug (Vicodin, oxycodone, etc.) that is possessed
by somebody who does not have a valid prescription to consume or possess those
drugs.
Under this statute, it is not required that you are impaired by
the drug while operating a motor vehicle and it is a “strict liability” crime
to merely have those metabolites in your system. This means that you could have
smoked marijuana thirty (30) days prior to driving, or ingested some other
substance and still be pulled over and cited for a DUI. However, the police
officer still needs to have reasonable
suspicion and probable cause
in order to pull you over or force you to provide a blood, breath or urine
test.
The
DUI charge, by itself, does not
require a breath reading. An officer obtains his reasonable suspicion or probable
cause for a traffic stop through the driving patterns you display. Signs
such as swerving, speed fluctuation (inconsistent speed), braking too early or
late, and the obvious, speeding, are all sufficient reasons for an officer to
pull you over for suspicion of driving impaired. It deals with
suspicion of driving while under the influence, according to the manner of
driving, physical and mental symptoms of impairment, or verbal admissions.
Arizona is a no tolerance state, therefore, the word leniency does not exist here. If you have a prescription for drugs that could cause impairment, or if you are a frequent user of Marijuana I highly urge you to not drive if you are under the influence of any of the above mentioned drugs as this could lead to a DUI.
Thank you for providing the information.
ReplyDeleteArizona Drug DUI cases can be difficult mostly because Arizona law does not provide many defenses to a Drug DUI charge.drug dui