"Slurred
Speech": Evidence of Intoxication?
Information
courtesy of Lawrence Taylor - DUIblog
As
with the odor of alcohol on the breath, few police reports will
fail to include an observation by the arresting officer that the
arrestee exhibited "slurred speech". (See my earlier post,
"Alcohol on the Breath: Evidence of DUI?"). The officer
fully expects to hear slurred speech in a person he suspects is
intoxicated, particularly after smelling alcohol on the breath,
and we tend to "hear" what we expect to hear. And hearing
it supplies the officer with corroboration of his suspicions.
Even
assuming the honesty of the officer that the defendants speech
was slurred, there is little evidence that this is symptomatic of
intoxication. Impairment of speech is, for example, a common --
and sober -- reaction to the stress, fear and nervousness that a
police investigation would be expected to engender; fatigue is another
well-known cause. However, consider the following excerpt from Discover
magazine:
"Bartenders,
police officers and hospital workers routinely identify drunks by
their slurred speech. Several investigative groups judged the captain
of the Exxon Valdez oil tanker to be intoxicated based solely on
the sound of his voice in his radio transmissions. But a team led
by Harry Holien, a phonetician at the University of Florida, has
found that even self-proclaimed experts are pretty bad at estimating
peoples alcohol levels by the way they talk.
"Hollien
asked clinicians who treat chemical dependency, along with a group
of everyday people, to listen to recordings made by volunteers when
they were sober, then mildly intoxicated, legally impaired, and
finally, completely smashed. Listeners consistently overestimated
the drunkeness of mildly intoxicated subjects. Conversely, they
underestimated the alcohol levels of those who were most inebriated.
Professionals were little better at perceiving the truth than the
ordinary Joes....
"He
thinks his research could encourage police to be more wary of making
snap judgments: Mild drinkers might come under needless suspicion..."
Saunders, "News of Science, Medicine and Technology: Straight
Talk", 21(1) Discover (Oct. 2000).
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