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Virginia ASAP Program Regulations - Chapter 20

Chapter 40 of Virginia ASAP Program Regulations

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My 5 Favorite Ways to win a DWI case in Fairfax County--Combine 2 or more and We are Well on Our Way

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Traffic Violations--Reckess Driving and other Serious Traffic Offenses

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Virginia Highway Safety Corridor Brochure

Fairfax County Reckless Speeding Lawyer Paul McGlone Recommends this Article from The Baltimore Sun, Discussing the Strict Enforcement of High Speed Cases in Northern Virginia

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Marijuana Defense

Local Fairfax Marijuana Defense Attorney Paul McGlone says these are the crucial regulations for Virginia Marijuana Field Tests that any Virginia Marijuana Defense Attorney should be familiar with. If you have any questions regarding a Marijuana Charge, please contact Paul McGlone at 703-273-2750 or 1-888-273-2750.

Fairfax County Marijuana Defense Attorney Paul Liam McGlone agrees with writer and forensic drug expert John Kelly, who explains in this enlightening report that many marijuana lab tests result in false positives and calls for more oversight of these tests.

Beware of Virginia Marijuana 251 Dismissal

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DWI Checkpoints

DWI Roadblock Guidelines from the Virginia Association of Chiefs of Police

This Fairfax County Police Roadblock, from Springfield, VA in 2008 looks like a Tijuana Border Crossing. Gestapo Germany never had such resources!

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General

Mall Cops -- The Real Story, Here in Fairfax County

This Citizen Did Not Want to Serve on a Montana Jury

History of Virginia State Police

Photograph of George Washington's Will

Photograph of Martha Washington's Will

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Blog Category:

DUI and DWI

9/7/2009
Paul McGlone
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Fairfax DWI Alcosensor Evidence Objection and Dismissal

Winning Alcosensor Issues in Virginia DUI Trials

 

Note:  This article by Fairfax DWI Lawyer Paul McGlone was originally posted elsewhere in April, 2008.

This article is about an issue that I have wanted to take to the Virginia Court of Appeals for review.   I thought I had a perfect case, but now a Circuit Court Judge has dismissed my case so there is nothing to appeal! 

 Several years ago, I noticed that many of my Fairfax, Virginia, DUI cases were being won or lost depending on how the Judge and/or the Police handled the use of Preliminary Breath Tests.   Just last week, I had another case, in Fairfax County Circuit Court, where the Judge dismissed the case based on how the Cop handled the PBT. 

 This test, called "the PBT", or, as I call it, "the Portable Breath Test", is used at the scene of an arrest to help the officer justify his decision for "probable cause" for the arrest.   The device commonly used in Fairfax is called an Alcosensor IV made by Intoximeters, Inc.   This is not the same as the final breath test, which is usually given down at the jail on a machine called "Intoxilyzer 5000".  

 Virginia law has a lengthy section that outlines the use of the PBT and whether it can be used at trial.   First, the law passed by the Virginia State Legislature says that the results of the PBT cannot be used against us in a prosecution under the DUI laws.   Then, there is caselaw that says that the results of the PBT can be used as evidence against us under certain circumstances, particularly when the Defense raises the issue of probable cause.  

So, now, we have some Judges who will admit the PBT results and come who don't.  If they admit the PBT results, they are almost certainly going to make a finding of probable cause any time there is a PBT result of .08 or more.    In other words, if there is a PBT, we probably lose the probable cause motion every time.  Without a PBT result, probable cause has to be judged based on the officer's testimony as to the appearance of the defendant, including his statements, driving, and performance on various roadside tests-- the so-called "field sobriety tests".

 In my case last week, we were fortunate enough to have a video which showed my client doing pretty well on the sobriety tests up to the point where the officer offered him the PBT.   In offering the PBT, we then heard the officer, on tape, saying "this is not admissible in court".    The officer didn't make any distinction, as in the caselaw, between "a prosecution" and a "probable cause hearing", and the Circuit Court Judge refused to allow the PBT result in evidence.  

 We cut off the Video at that point, and the Judge had to make his ruling on Probable cause based on the remaining evidence.   Without the PBT result, the Judge ruled in our favor on the probable cause issue, and dismissed the case.   The case never proceeded to the point where the final breath test of .11 could be offered into evidence, and the case was dismissed in spite of the fact that my client blew a .11 on his final breath test.



Since graduating from George Mason University School of Law in 1988, I have had over 20 years of trial experience, defending citizens accused of a wide variety of misdemeanor and felony offenses in Northern Virginia.   Since 1999, my practice has been almost exclusively focused on the Fairfax County Courts, allowing me to gain an increasing familiarity with the Courts, Prosecutors and Judges here in Fairfax County, Virginia.  

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