And the Winner of the First Foster Brooks Award in Jurisprudence Goes To...
Nick Gillespie | October 27, 2005, 11:04am
...Fairfax, Virginia county Judge Ian M. O'Flaherty, who is waging a one-man campaign against his state's drunken driving laws as unconstitutional. From the Wash Post account:
"The Fifth Amendment," said O'Flaherty, 59, "is an absolute protection against requiring the defendant to say or do anything in the course of a trial. . . . The Fifth Amendment means the defendant can sit there, not say or do anything, and at the end of the case say, 'Can I go home now?' "
No other judge in Fairfax -- or elsewhere in Virginia, as far as can be determined -- has joined O'Flaherty. But the judge said some other jurists have told him they agree with him. "I had one judge tell me, 'I'd rule that way, but I don't have the guts to,' " O'Flaherty said. "I told him, 'You should be driving a truck.' "
O'Flaherty--did he have to be Irish?--is particularly incensed over the way the burden of proof in DWI cases is routinely shifted back to defendants. Critics say he's abetting a public safety problem by letting boozing drivers get away with impaired driving. He's saying something else:
O'Flaherty said that he was not disregarding blood alcohol results and that he allowed them as evidence when they were properly obtained. But he said alcohol affects people in different ways, so presuming someone with a .08 blood alcohol content is drunk might not be correct.
Similarly, the judge said, "sometimes these tests are taken two hours after" an arrest, and there's no evidence of the blood alcohol content at the time of the traffic stop. O'Flaherty said one way to quickly obtain a blood alcohol reading would be to have a mobile van available with breathalyzer equipment, though he realized that would be costly.
"Criminal law shouldn't be built around saving a buck," O'Flaherty said. "We shouldn't convict people because it's cheaper and easier."
Have a snort and read more here.
Reason's Jacob Sullum questioned the wisdom of 0.08 percent blood alcohol concentration laws here. And I argued for a lower legal drinking age here.
Foster Brooks requiem here.
Dave W. | October 27, 2005, 2:20pm | #
Also I am a little confused about the driving is a privelidge vs a right. I don't know that the state should be issuing privelidges like that, it seems like a poor excuse to not follow due process.
I think the idea is that the fines or jail associated with DUI are a crime, which directly implicates the 5th Amendment. However, losing your license for refusing a test is not a crime -- no fines or jail -- just loss of license, so the portion of the law that takes away your license is a loss-of-privilege-part, rather than a law part.
From what I understand, here is how it works:
1. There are 4th and 5th amendment concerns about forcing ppl to take drunk tests, especially when (as usual) no warrant is sought or issued.
2. However, the police want to force ppl to take the tests anyway. However, they are also worried that this is unConstitutional.
3. In order to take care of the problems noted in #2, the police don't force you to take a drunk test because you may have committed a crime (even though you may have committed a crime). Rather, you are incentivized to take the drunk test to avoid losing your driving privileges. In other words, the direct consequence of refusal to take the drunk test is a mere loss of privileges, but: (1) the refusal is not a crime in itself; (2) the refusal carries no fines/jail; and (3) no adverse inferences if they do proceed to criminal trial (presumably on DUI charges).
(4) the net effect is that police usually get "voluntary" co-operation on their desired tests so that the driving "privilege" is not lost. Of course, those test results will end up being used against the accused in a criminal trial, but that is just considered legal happenstance -- the test was consented to for reasons unrelated to the criminal trial.
somebody correct me if I have this wrong, but I think that is a reasonable approximation of the truth. You can see why the Irishman has some problems with all this.