Lawsuit

DUI (Driving Under the Influence) or DWI (Driving While Influenced) Consequences

About DUI (Driving Under the Influence) or DWI (Driving While Influenced) and its consequences and procedures. Discuss the tests of DUI and the legal proceedings once charged with Driving Under the Influence.   A DUI/DWI (Drivin…

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  1. DUI: When You Get Pulled Over By a Police Officer
  2. Field Sobriety DUI Tests
  3. Horizontal Eye Test by Officer for Drinking and Driving
  4. Walk and Turn DUI Test
  5. One-Leg Stand Drinking and Driving Test
  1. Legal Order of Proceedings Involving DUI Tickets:
  2. Seek an Experience DUI Lawyer
  3. Consequences of a Driving Under the Influence
  4. What often changes the answer

About DUI (Driving Under the Influence) or DWI (Driving While Influenced) and its consequences and procedures. Discuss the tests of DUI and the legal proceedings once charged with Driving Under the Influence.

 

A DUI/DWI (Driving Under the Influence/Driving While Influenced) is a serious driving violation which can carry hefty financial and long-lasting legal consequences. While the intent of this article is not to provide free legal advice, it will outline the general proceedings and potential consequences of receiving a DUI/DWI ticket or being involved in a DUI/DWI accident.
 
Legal advice will be state specific and is best sought after by consulting with a lawyer familiar with DUI/DWI cases in your state. An experienced DUI/DWI lawyer might be able to get your case dismissed completely, or get your sentence reduced if you are convicted. A lawyer can determine if your constitutional rights were violated and if the arresting Officer followed protocol.
 

DUI: When You Get Pulled Over By a Police Officer

 

If an Officer has reason to suspect there is a problem, he/she may pull you over to investigate and make sure you are not driving under the influence. In some cases, you may have swerved to avoid a pothole or maybe you took your eyes off the road for half a second to change the radio station and you weaved over the double yellow line. Regardless of the circumstance an Officer is required to pull you over and execute several tests to ensure your safety and the safety of other drivers.
 

Field Sobriety DUI Tests

 

The first sets of tests, called Field Sobriety Tests, were developed to test your coordination and balance. They are the Horizontal Eye Test, the Walk and Turn test, and the One Leg Stand. Each of these tests is designed so that a sober person will be able to pass without a problem.
 
While they do not provide the Officer with a specific blood alcohol level, they do allow the Officer to pass judgment on your ability to operate a motor vehicle. Some individuals, such as those with a physical handicap or the elderly, will naturally be unable to perform these tests and an Officer will then rely on the Breathalyzer to make his/her decision to arrest you.
 

Horizontal Eye Test by Officer for Drinking and Driving

 

During the Horizontal Eye Test the Officer will ask you to follow his/her finger using only your eyes and not moving your entire head. A sober person (assuming no physical or age impairments) will have no problem with this exercise, but someone who is intoxicated will display abnormal eye jerking. Based on his/her findings the Officer will shine a light into your eyes and check pupil dilation.
 

Walk and Turn DUI Test

 

The next test will be the Walk and Turn. There needs to be a flat surface for the Officer to request this test, and you must demonstrate the ability to walk at least nine heel to toe steps before turning around and returning to the Officer. Again, if the road surface is not flat and the Officer cannot draw a straight line on it for you to follow, this test should not be performed because the outcome will be skewed in favor of your arrest.
 

One-Leg Stand Drinking and Driving Test

 

The One-Leg Stand also requires a level surface. You will be asked to stand on one leg for a short period of time with both hands at your side, and then you will have to switch legs. It is important that all these tests are performed since a physical or age impairment may skew one or all of the outcomes.
 
Once the Officer determines you are intoxicated based on these tests you will be asked to take the Breathalyzer test. You will breathe into the Breathalyzer and it will compute your blood alcohol level. In all states you are considered legally intoxicated if your blood alcohol is 0.08 or higher, and only 0.02 if you are under the age of twenty-one. If you fail the field sobriety tests and the Breathalyzer you will be read your rights and arrested. You must remain in jail until someone posts bail and you receive a court date for sentencing.
 

Legal Order of Proceedings Involving DUI Tickets:

  1. Preliminary Hearing
  2. Arraignment
  3. Trial by Jury
After the initial arrest, you will be given a Preliminary Hearing date so that a judge may review your case and determine if there is sufficient evidence for the case against you. Very rarely is there not sufficient evidence against you and the next court date will be for your arraignment. During the arraignment you will hear all the charges against you and be asked to enter a plea of “guilty” or “not guilty”.
 

Seek an Experience DUI Lawyer

 

It is imperative for you to have an experienced DUI lawyer to guide you through the proceedings and help clarify the severity of charges brought against you. Depending on the circumstances of your case, you can request a trial by jury if you believe you are innocent and do not accept the options offered during the arraignment.
 
Requesting a trial by jury can be very complicated since witnesses and experts will be called upon to testify for and against your case. If you choose to take this route your attorney should have appropriate experience in DUI cases to help reduce your sentence or have your case dismissed altogether.
 

Consequences of a Driving Under the Influence

 

There can be serious consequences for being issued a DUI ticket and these consequences will increase in severity depending on how many similar offences you have had and if your violation included a DUI accident. A DUI ticket is considered a misdemeanor and will stay on your permanent driving record forever, while a death resulting from a DUI accident is considered manslaughter and is a felony.
 
Punishment for driving under the influence is mainly state specific, although the following are generally included in your sentence:
 
  1. Fines: Each state will differ in the dollar amount of your ticket. In Texas, a first-time offender may pay up to $2000 and repeat offenders may face fines up to $4000. In Florida, first time offenders are subject to a maximum $500 fine and repeat offenders may pay up to $1000.
  2. Suspended License: Most states will suspend your license for up to one year for the first offense, and states such as Connecticut will revoke your license after the third offence. It may be possible to obtain a Conditional License for commuting to work but this is conditional on your individual case.
  3. Adding Points to Your License: This will invariably increase your insurance premium for a period of time determined by the individual companies.
  4. Drug Programs/Classes: Most states will require a twelve-hour DUI education course for first-time offenders. Repeat offenders sentenced to parole may also be required to complete a 30-day drug rehabilitation program.
  5. Community Service: You may be required to perform community service as part of your sentence. Some states, such as Texas, put a limit on the number of hours required. In addition to the mandatory fifty hours of service, Florida offers the option of paying ten dollars for each additional hour required to satisfy the sentence.
  6. Some states are now using an ignition interlock device which require the driver to breathe into the device prior to starting the vehicle. Failing this Breathalyzer will lock the ignition in your car and you will be unable to drive it for a period of twenty-four hours.
In addition to seeking a lawyer with DUI experience, if you have valuable assets such as your house or stocks and bonds then you may also seek professional asset protection for your estate and belongings. An accident caused from drinking and driving may have civil consequences and, consequently, severe financial loss of your personal and family’s estate. For further assistance please seek a qualified attorney and estate planner specializing in asset protection such as Estate Street Partners.
 
Read more articles on Irrevocable Trusts & Asset Protection:

Helpful resources: Readers often continue with Asset Protection for Business Owners, LLC vs Trust for Asset Protection, and official SBA guidance for broader context on the planning choices involved.

What often changes the answer

After reviewing DUI (Driving Under the Influence) or DWI (Driving While Influenced) Consequences, many people want a clearer sense of how the answer changes once real life timing, funding, and control are added to the discussion.

What usually shapes the next step

  • Timing matters because asset protection works best before a claim becomes immediate.
  • Control matters because keeping too much direct control can weaken the protection people hoped to create.
  • Funding matters because creditors usually look at what was transferred, when it moved, and how the structure operates.

Where readers often continue

A practical next reading path is Asset Protection From Lawsuit, Asset Protection Trust, and Irrevocable Trust. When the question turns from reading to implementation, many readers move from these guides to a direct planning conversation.

Related resources

Readers focused on lawsuit pressure usually want to compare what protection needs to be in place before a claim, what counts as risky timing, and which structures still leave gaps.

What people want to know first

The first concern is usually whether protection still works once risk feels real, or whether timing has already become the deciding factor.

What most readers compare next

Trust structure, entity structure, and transfer timing usually become the next practical questions.

When a conversation helps more

Once structure, timing, and next steps start intersecting, it usually helps to talk through the options in the right order.

Explore Asset Protection From Lawsuit

Review how timing, creditor pressure, and pre-claim planning change the strategy.

Explore Asset Protection

Review the main introduction to asset protection planning and the core decisions that shape a stronger structure.

Explore Irrevocable Trust

Understand how irrevocable trust planning works, when people use it, and what tradeoffs usually matter most.

Explore How It Works

Follow the planning process from consultation through drafting, funding, and the next practical steps.

Explore Ebook

Download the guide for a longer walkthrough you can read at your own pace and revisit later.

Explore Main Blog

Browse more practical articles, comparisons, and next-step guidance across the full UltraTrust blog.

What people usually compare next

Most readers compare structure, timing, control, and the practical next step after narrowing the issue in the article above.

What usually makes the answer more specific

Actual ownership, funding, current exposure, and how much control someone wants to keep usually matter more than labels in isolation.

When another step helps more than another article

Once timing, structure, and next steps start overlapping, it often helps to talk through the sequence instead of trying to compare everything mentally.

Questions readers usually ask next

Lawsuit-focused readers usually want clearer answers around timing, transfer risk, creditor access, and which structure still leaves avoidable gaps.

Can a protection plan still help once a lawsuit feels close?

That usually depends on timing, transfer history, and whether the structure was created before the pressure became obvious. The closer the threat, the more important the facts become.

Why do readers keep comparing trust planning with entity planning in lawsuit situations?

Because they solve different parts of the problem. Entity planning often addresses operating liability, while trust planning is usually part of the conversation about where personal wealth is held.

What often changes the answer in creditor-protection planning?

Transfer timing, funding, retained control, and the facts surrounding the claim usually change the answer more than broad marketing language ever does.

When is the next step to review structure instead of just asking broader questions?

It usually becomes a structure question once the discussion turns to real assets, current ownership, and whether the plan needs to work before a known problem gets closer.

Ready to take the next step?

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