THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT DWI CASES
1. Range of Punishment:
First Offense -- Class B Misdemeanor
Fine: up to $2000
County Jail: 72 hours up to 180 days
Probation: up to 2 years
Driver's License Suspension: 90 days up to 1 year
Second Offense -- Class A Misdemeanor
Fine: up to $4,000
County Jail: 30 days up to 1 year
Probation: up to 2 years
Driver's License Suspension: 180 days up to 2 years
Third Offense -- 3rd Degree Felony
Fine: up to $10,000
Prison: 2 years up to 10 years
Probation: 2 years up to 10 years
Driver's License Suspension: 180 days up to 2 years
2. Driver's License Surcharges:
First Offense Conviction: $1000/year x 3 years
Subsequent Offense Conviction: $1,500/year x 3 years
Conviction Where Breath Test is .16 or Above: $2,000/year x 3 years
3. Just Because You Blew Over the Legal Limit Does Not Automatically Mean
that Your Are Guilty. It's not illegal for you to be intoxicated at a jail
when you take a breath test. It's illegal for you to be intoxicated when you
are driving. And a person's alcohol level can vary over time. Even if you
blew over the legal limit at jail, it's possible that your blood alcohol was
below the legal limit when you were driving. A jury in a DWI case is allowed
to reach it's only conclusions about the meaning of breath test results.
4. A Portable Breath Result from the Roadside Cannot Be Used to Prove Your
Blood Alcohol Level. It's simply not considered scientifically reliable
evidence. The results are inadmissible in court.
5. There is No Longer A Time Limit On the Use of Prior DWI Convictions. Even
if a DWI conviction is 20 years old, it can still be used to increase the
punishment for a new offense.
6. You Cannot Get Deferred Adjudication for First Offense Driving While
Intoxicated. A first offense DWI is one of the few offenses in Texas for
which you cannot get deferred adjudication probation. However, if a DWI is
plea-bargained to some other type of charge, deferred adjudication is then
possible.
7. You Should Never Make a Decision About Your DWI Case Until You Have Seen
the Video. In most DWI cases, there is a law enforcement videotape that was
made on the side of the road. Our clients are often surprised at how they
look on the tape -- some pleasantly, some not as much. Don't simply rely on
your memory of what happened. Judge your case by the same evidence that a
jury would see before you make a decision.