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time
of driving: if the BAC was rising, it could have been a .07% or
even lower. That kind of leaves you in a pickle. What do you do?
Simple:
You just get the legislature to pass a law saying that the blood-alcohol
when tested is the same as it was when driving.
What?
But thats not true: BAC constantly changes as alcohol is metabolized.
How can we legally presume what we know is not true? Well, yes,
but we can never really know, can we? And it sure makes the prosecutors
job easier, doesnt it? Let the defendant try to prove what
his BAC was an hour or two earlier.
Thats
right: Most states now have laws saying your BAC was the same 3
hours earlier -- unless you can prove it wasnt! Typical is
Californias law: "It is a rebuttable presumption that
the person had 0.08% or more, by weight, of alcohol in his or her
blood at the time of driving the vehicle if the person had 0.08
percent, by weight, of alcohol in his or her blood at the time of
performance of a chemical test within three hours after the driving".
Vehicle Code sec. 23152(b).
Wait
a minute....What about the State having the "burden of proof"
-- proof beyond a reasonable doubt? How can the law simply presume
guilt and force the defendant to disprove it? What about the "presumption
of innocence"?
Details,
details. The important thing here is that we get these drunk drivers
off the road, isnt it?
Law
Offices of Lawrence Taylor, Inc.
Practice limited to DUI defense
Los Angeles, California
http://www.DUIcentral.com/
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