Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle

User avatar
Darth Wong
Sith Lord
Sith Lord
Posts: 70028
Joined: 2002-07-03 12:25am
Location: Toronto, Canada
Contact:

Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

Post by Darth Wong »

Yes, there are lawyers who specialize in helping drunk drivers get off. Here's an example of one such institution:

http://www.impaireddriving.ca/

Among their other specialties is helping guys get off if they've blown over .08 blood alcohol on a breathalyzer. Let's look at an example of some of the tactics they'll use:
The charge of over .08 refers to the charge of operating a motor vehicle when your blood alcohol level exceeds 80 mg of alcohol in 100 ml of blood. The police prove this charge by taking a breath or blood test (most commonly breath).

Most breath tests are taken sometime after the person has been stopped driving, and has been taken to the police station. The legal question is; what was your blood alcohol level at the time you were operating the vehicle, not what was your blood alcohol reading at the police station when you provided your breath sample? Your blood alcohol level could have been under .08 when you were driving, but over .08 by the time you took the breath test at the station.

Here’s how:

Alcohol takes time to be absorbed by the human body. If you had drinks just before you got in your car to drive, the alcohol that is in your body may not have been absorbed into your blood stream yet (it could still be in your stomach or your intestine). By the time you provide the breath test, your blood alcohol level might be over .08. This is sometimes called “the last drink defence”.
Now here's the question: isn't this kind of bullshit unethical? I know you're supposed to do whatever is necessary to help your client, but the fact is that this kind of defense certainly undermines the spirit of any such law (0.08 blood alcohol requires four fucking drinks for the average adult male) because anybody who blows over 0.08 is obviously an impaired driver even if the alcohol from his last drink hadn't quite been absorbed into his bloodstream yet; the alcohol is in his system regardless.

Where exactly does a lawyer's responsibility to his client end and his responsibility to society begin?
Image
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing

"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC

"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness

"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.

http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
User avatar
Faram
Bastard Operator from Hell
Posts: 5271
Joined: 2002-07-04 07:39am
Location: Fighting Polarbears

Post by Faram »

Well I sorta hope that a DUI lawyer gets killed buy a drunk driver that also dies in the crash.

But then again I absolutly hate drunk drivers.
[img=right]http://hem.bredband.net/b217293/warsaban.gif[/img]

"Either God wants to abolish evil, and cannot; or he can, but does not want to. ... If he wants to, but cannot, he is impotent. If he can, but does not want to, he is wicked. ... If, as they say, God can abolish evil, and God really wants to do it, why is there evil in the world?" -Epicurus


Fear is the mother of all gods.

Nature does all things spontaneously, by herself, without the meddling of the gods. -Lucretius
User avatar
SCRawl
Has a bad feeling about this.
Posts: 4191
Joined: 2002-12-24 03:11pm
Location: Burlington, Canada

Re: Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

Post by SCRawl »

Darth Wong wrote:Now here's the question: isn't this kind of bullshit unethical? I know you're supposed to do whatever is necessary to help your client, but the fact is that this kind of defense certainly undermines the spirit of any such law (0.08 blood alcohol requires four fucking drinks for the average adult male) because anybody who blows over 0.08 is obviously an impaired driver even if the alcohol from his last drink hadn't quite been absorbed into his bloodstream yet; the alcohol is in his system regardless.
I'm going to make an argument I don't believe in, but illustrates the extreme end of the logical spectrum.

Let's say that I chug 5 ounces of whiskey -- all in one go. This is the equivalent of four drinks. I then get right into my car and start driving home before it gets absorbed into my blood, knowing that it will take me only ten minutes to get there and enjoy my buzz in private. Five minutes later I get pulled over by a police officer (for, say, a broken tail light), who smells my breath and decides that I'm impaired. An hour later he gets around to giving me the test, and I blow over.

In this (admittedly ridiculous) circumstance, have I done anything illegal? I was fully in control while driving, and am guilty of only stupidly bad judgement in the practice of enjoying my booze.

My point is that the lawyer could argue something between "left the party drunk" and the scenario I just mentioned as being the facts of the case, and leave his client in the clear. The standard is, after all, operating the vehicle while impaired, not while having alcohol in one's system.
Where exactly does a lawyer's responsibility to his client end and his responsibility to society begin?
I'm not a lawyer (and I don't even play one on TV) but it seems to me that the lawyer's job as an officer of the court is to see that only truthful evidence is presented and that his client's interests are looked after within that stricture. Anything past that is someone else's problem.

I don't like it any better than you do, but it's how our justice system works.
73% of all statistics are made up, including this one.

I'm waiting as fast as I can.
User avatar
Edi
Dragonlord
Dragonlord
Posts: 12461
Joined: 2002-07-11 12:27am
Location: Helsinki, Finland

Re: Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

Post by Edi »

SCRawl wrote:I'm going to make an argument I don't believe in, but illustrates the extreme end of the logical spectrum.

Let's say that I chug 5 ounces of whiskey -- all in one go. This is the equivalent of four drinks. I then get right into my car and start driving home before it gets absorbed into my blood, knowing that it will take me only ten minutes to get there and enjoy my buzz in private. Five minutes later I get pulled over by a police officer (for, say, a broken tail light), who smells my breath and decides that I'm impaired. An hour later he gets around to giving me the test, and I blow over.

In this (admittedly ridiculous) circumstance, have I done anything illegal? I was fully in control while driving, and am guilty of only stupidly bad judgement in the practice of enjoying my booze.

My point is that the lawyer could argue something between "left the party drunk" and the scenario I just mentioned as being the facts of the case, and leave his client in the clear. The standard is, after all, operating the vehicle while impaired, not while having alcohol in one's system.
Bad example. Chugging four drinks or equivalent in one go means that the alcohol will just hit your system quicker and you might actually be well under the influence in under ten minutes. The only thing that would delay that is if you had consumed a large meal just prior to taking the drinks, and how much that will slow it down varies by person.

And to answer the question, yes, you did commit an illegal act. While your BAC might have been under the .08 threshold, the breathalyzer is considered sufficiently accurate as to be reliable evidence in court. That means that outlier cases and cases like your hypothetical will just get fucked over and tough luck. Frankly, it is deserved punishment for that level of stupidity and 99.99% of the time the fucker is guilty of DUI anyway. As for operating impaired vs. alcohol in your bloodstream, that is meaningless semantics whoring if the breathalyzer burns you. If you get burned by the breathalyzer, it means that you are already impaired enough to be forbidden from operating a vehicle.

Edi
Warwolf Urban Combat Specialist

Why is it so goddamned hard to get little assholes like you to admit it when you fuck up? Is it pride? What gives you the right to have any pride?
–Darth Wong to vivftp

GOP message? Why don't they just come out of the closet: FASCISTS R' US –Patrick Degan

The GOP has a problem with anyone coming out of the closet. –18-till-I-die
User avatar
Durandal
Bile-Driven Hate Machine
Posts: 17927
Joined: 2002-07-03 06:26pm
Location: Silicon Valley, CA
Contact:

Re: Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

Post by Durandal »

Darth Wong wrote:Where exactly does a lawyer's responsibility to his client end and his responsibility to society begin?
That's a difficult question because part of a defense attorney's responsibility to society is vigorously defending his client using every legal means at his disposal.

EDIT: Also, an officer will usually perform a road-side sobriety test to determine that the driver was impaired at the time he was driving the vehicle. If the driver fails that test, the police get probable cause for compelling a breathalyzer. The breathalyzer simply confirms what the road-side test already told the police.
Damien Sorresso

"Ever see what them computa bitchez do to numbas? It ain't natural. Numbas ain't supposed to be code, they supposed to quantify shit."
- The Onion
User avatar
theski
Sith Marauder
Posts: 4327
Joined: 2003-01-28 03:20pm
Location: Hurricane Watching

Post by theski »

This same question could be asked of Laywers that defend Child molesters. Even if the client told them they did it..
Sudden power is apt to be insolent, sudden liberty saucy; that behaves best which has grown gradually.
User avatar
Alferd Packer
Sith Marauder
Posts: 3704
Joined: 2002-07-19 09:22pm
Location: Slumgullion Pass
Contact:

Post by Alferd Packer »

Do Canadian provinces and other countries have implied consent laws? The IC law in NJ is pretty harsh:
Drivers on New Jersey roadways have agreed, simply by using New Jersey roadways, to submit to a breath test given by law enforce-
ment or hospital staff following an arrest for a drinking and driving
offense. Motorists refusing to take a breath test will be detained and
brought to a hospital, where hospital staff may draw blood.

Motorists refusing to take a breath test in New Jersey are subject
to an MVC insurance surcharge of $1,000 a year for three years.
Failure to pay this surcharge will result in an indefinite driver li-
cense suspension until the fee is paid.

An April 2004 state law made the refusal to submit to a breath test
equivalent to driving with a BAC of .10% or higher for a first of-
fense. The current penalty for both is the loss of driving privileges
for between seven months and one year, to run concurrently or
consecutively based upon a judge’s order.
I wonder if IC laws have given lawyers more ammunition, despite the fact that the law is moral.[/quote]
"There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance--that principle is contempt prior to investigation." -Herbert Spencer

"Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain." - Schiller, Die Jungfrau von Orleans, III vi.
User avatar
SCRawl
Has a bad feeling about this.
Posts: 4191
Joined: 2002-12-24 03:11pm
Location: Burlington, Canada

Post by SCRawl »

Alferd Packer wrote:Do Canadian provinces and other countries have implied consent laws? The IC law in NJ is pretty harsh:
Drivers on New Jersey roadways have agreed, simply by using New Jersey roadways, to submit to a breath test given by law enforce-
ment or hospital staff following an arrest for a drinking and driving
offense. Motorists refusing to take a breath test will be detained and
brought to a hospital, where hospital staff may draw blood.

Motorists refusing to take a breath test in New Jersey are subject
to an MVC insurance surcharge of $1,000 a year for three years.
Failure to pay this surcharge will result in an indefinite driver li-
cense suspension until the fee is paid.

An April 2004 state law made the refusal to submit to a breath test
equivalent to driving with a BAC of .10% or higher for a first of-
fense. The current penalty for both is the loss of driving privileges
for between seven months and one year, to run concurrently or
consecutively based upon a judge’s order.
I wonder if IC laws have given lawyers more ammunition, despite the fact that the law is moral.
Here in Canada, the charge for refusing to submit to a breathalyzer is equivalent to driving while impaired. If for some legal reason (say, poor lung capacity) a person is unable to give a breath sample, then a blood sample will be compelled, with the same ramifications.
73% of all statistics are made up, including this one.

I'm waiting as fast as I can.
User avatar
SCRawl
Has a bad feeling about this.
Posts: 4191
Joined: 2002-12-24 03:11pm
Location: Burlington, Canada

Re: Morality of DUI-specialty lawyers

Post by SCRawl »

Edi wrote:And to answer the question, yes, you did commit an illegal act. While your BAC might have been under the .08 threshold, the breathalyzer is considered sufficiently accurate as to be reliable evidence in court. That means that outlier cases and cases like your hypothetical will just get fucked over and tough luck. Frankly, it is deserved punishment for that level of stupidity and 99.99% of the time the fucker is guilty of DUI anyway. As for operating impaired vs. alcohol in your bloodstream, that is meaningless semantics whoring if the breathalyzer burns you. If you get burned by the breathalyzer, it means that you are already impaired enough to be forbidden from operating a vehicle.
Oh, I'm quite in agreement with you. As I suggested in my post, I was merely playing the devil's advocate. The level of stupidity and irresponsibility shown by well, me (in my example) is more than deserving of being charged. Still, if lawyers can get their clients off using such tactics, we're presented with two options: live with it; or change the law.

Just a clarification: when I said that the standard was operating a vehicle while impaired as opposed to having alcohol in one's system, I should have been more specific. Obviously, having a BAC of .08 is a recognized standard which implies impairment. Having sufficient alcohol in one's stomach to eventually reach that standard is not the same thing, and this is where the lawyers can start splitting the hairs.
73% of all statistics are made up, including this one.

I'm waiting as fast as I can.
User avatar
Jalinth
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1577
Joined: 2004-01-09 05:51pm
Location: The Wet coast of Canada

Post by Jalinth »

Alferd Packer wrote:Do Canadian provinces and other countries have implied consent laws? The IC law in NJ is pretty harsh:
The "implied consent" is only needed because of the US Constitution. To my knowledge, the Canadian courts don't have anywhere near as many problems with police roadblocks for various things. Whether you think these random roadblocks are reasonable depends on how libertarian are you.

But basically the law is that if you refuse to take a breathalyzer, you effectively "fail" the blood test to my knowledge.
User avatar
Base Delta Zero
Padawan Learner
Posts: 329
Joined: 2005-12-15 07:05pm
Location: High orbit above your homeworld.

Post by Base Delta Zero »

Well, it may not be the most high-minded job in the world, but I'd say it's moral... someone has to defend them, after all. Drunk drivers and child molesters may be equivalent to pondscum, but not allowing anyone to defend them would be more appropriate for a police state.
Darth Wong wrote:If the Church did driver training, they would try to get seatbelts outlawed because they aren't 100% effective in preventing fatalities in high-speed car crashes, then they would tell people that driving fast is a sin and chalk up the skyrocketing death toll to God's will. And homosexuals, because homosexuals drive fast.
Peptuck wrote: I don't think magical Borg adaptation can respond effectively to getting punched by a planet.
User avatar
General Zod
Never Shuts Up
Posts: 29211
Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
Location: The Clearance Rack
Contact:

Post by General Zod »

Base Delta Zero wrote:Well, it may not be the most high-minded job in the world, but I'd say it's moral... someone has to defend them, after all. Drunk drivers and child molesters may be equivalent to pondscum, but not allowing anyone to defend them would be more appropriate for a police state.
Defending someone, yes. However looking for technicalities and loopholes to get someone off when they're obviously guilty is at best violating the spirit of the law, at worst dishonest and sleezy.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
User avatar
Gaidin
Sith Devotee
Posts: 2646
Joined: 2004-06-19 12:27am
Contact:

Post by Gaidin »

General Zod wrote:Defending someone, yes. However looking for technicalities and loopholes to get someone off when they're obviously guilty is at best violating the spirit of the law, at worst dishonest and sleezy.
The spirit of the law involves them acting to the best of their ability to aquit the charged.

If the best of their ability involves nothing more than loopholes and they *know* that their client is guilty, aren't they allowed to back out on moral grounds?
User avatar
General Zod
Never Shuts Up
Posts: 29211
Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
Location: The Clearance Rack
Contact:

Post by General Zod »

Gaidin wrote:
General Zod wrote:Defending someone, yes. However looking for technicalities and loopholes to get someone off when they're obviously guilty is at best violating the spirit of the law, at worst dishonest and sleezy.
The spirit of the law involves them acting to the best of their ability to aquit the charged.

If the best of their ability involves nothing more than loopholes and they *know* that their client is guilty, aren't they allowed to back out on moral grounds?
We seem to be working on two different definitions of "spirit of the law" here. By going with the spirit of the law someone should be making decisions based on what the law was intended to do, not the exact technicalities of what it says letter per letter, scrimping for any foothold you can find.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
User avatar
Batman
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 16398
Joined: 2002-07-09 04:51am
Location: Seriously thinking about moving to Marvel because so much of the DCEU stinks

Post by Batman »

Gaidin wrote:
General Zod wrote:Defending someone, yes. However looking for technicalities and loopholes to get someone off when they're obviously guilty is at best violating the spirit of the law, at worst dishonest and sleezy.
The spirit of the law involves them acting to the best of their ability to aquit the charged.
Like hell it does. The spirit of the law would require them to get their clients out of situations loopholes and technicalities of the law got them into, as opposed to using said technicalities to get their clients out of situations the spirit of the law clearly wanted them convicted for.
'Next time I let Superman take charge, just hit me. Real hard.'
'You're a princess from a society of immortal warriors. I'm a rich kid with issues. Lots of issues.'
'No. No dating for the Batman. It might cut into your brooding time.'
'Tactically we have multiple objectives. So we need to split into teams.'-'Dibs on the Amazon!'
'Hey, we both have a Martian's phone number on our speed dial. I think I deserve the benefit of the doubt.'
'You know, for a guy with like 50 different kinds of vision, you sure are blind.'
User avatar
Gaidin
Sith Devotee
Posts: 2646
Joined: 2004-06-19 12:27am
Contact:

Post by Gaidin »

And the million dollar question?
User avatar
General Zod
Never Shuts Up
Posts: 29211
Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
Location: The Clearance Rack
Contact:

Post by General Zod »

Gaidin wrote:And the million dollar question?
Care to rephrase in English? Most of us don't speak obtusese.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
User avatar
Gaidin
Sith Devotee
Posts: 2646
Joined: 2004-06-19 12:27am
Contact:

Post by Gaidin »

I'd asked whether the lawyer appointed was *required* to defend them or if they could back out certain grounds, moral or otherwise.
User avatar
General Zod
Never Shuts Up
Posts: 29211
Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
Location: The Clearance Rack
Contact:

Post by General Zod »

Gaidin wrote:I'd asked whether the lawyer appointed was *required* to defend them or if they could back out certain grounds, moral or otherwise.
A lawyer doesn't have to agree to defend anyone, but once they accept a case they're required to defend to the best of their ability or they risk jeopardizing their career. (Although it might work differently for public defenders). However that doesn't change the fact that someone attempting to exploit loopholes to defend their client is being sleezy at best, and still violates the spirit of the law.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
User avatar
mr friendly guy
The Doctor
Posts: 11235
Joined: 2004-12-12 10:55pm
Location: In a 1960s police telephone box somewhere in Australia

Post by mr friendly guy »

Ok, this is a stupid question, but can't the police do a breathalyser on the spot. In Australia we have "booze buses" where the police are located at strategic places and do random breath tests. Obviously in this situation, police have the breathalyer on them.

Now if the police had to stop a driver for another reason, and they don't have a breathalyser machine on them, then can't they book said driver for the reason they stopped the driver in the first place?
Never apologise for being a geek, because they won't apologise to you for being an arsehole. John Barrowman - 22 June 2014 Perth Supernova.

Countries I have been to - 14.
Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Sweden, USA.
Always on the lookout for more nice places to visit.
User avatar
General Zod
Never Shuts Up
Posts: 29211
Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
Location: The Clearance Rack
Contact:

Post by General Zod »

mr friendly guy wrote:Ok, this is a stupid question, but can't the police do a breathalyser on the spot. In Australia we have "booze buses" where the police are located at strategic places and do random breath tests. Obviously in this situation, police have the breathalyer on them.

Now if the police had to stop a driver for another reason, and they don't have a breathalyser machine on them, then can't they book said driver for the reason they stopped the driver in the first place?
As far as I know, breathalysers are a standard part of patrol-car equipment. If someone is driving erratically and the police officer in question has a reason to suspect the person of being drunk, they can breathalyze them on the spot. I may be wrong of course, but someone more familiar with US police procedures than me can correct me.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
User avatar
RedImperator
Roosevelt Republican
Posts: 16465
Joined: 2002-07-11 07:59pm
Location: Delaware
Contact:

Post by RedImperator »

General Zod wrote:
Base Delta Zero wrote:Well, it may not be the most high-minded job in the world, but I'd say it's moral... someone has to defend them, after all. Drunk drivers and child molesters may be equivalent to pondscum, but not allowing anyone to defend them would be more appropriate for a police state.
Defending someone, yes. However looking for technicalities and loopholes to get someone off when they're obviously guilty is at best violating the spirit of the law, at worst dishonest and sleezy.
A defense attorney has a professional obligation to do anything in his power, including exploiting loopholes, to get his client acquitted. Society can't write laws with loopholes and then blame the lawyers for exploiting them.

It's an ugly necessity. You can't open the doors to picking and chosing who gets a lawyer or how far lawyers go to defend "obviously guilty" clients, because sooner or later, one of those obviously guilty clients will turn out to be not guilty after all and in jail anyway. We've made a decision as a society that we're willing to let the guilty occasionally go free to ensure an innocent man can't get convicted (in theory, anyway). That means sometimes some scumfuck will walk.

Now as for the personal morality of a lawyer who starts up a DUI practice, that's tricky. On the one hand, even drunk drivers deserve lawyers, and a lawyer who specializes in DUI can do a better job defending his clients than a more generalist defense attorney. On the other, it's pretty clear these guys realized they could make a lot of money getting sodden fratboys off the hook. The whole thing strikes me as inevitable, but slimy.
Image
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
X-Ray Blues
User avatar
Darth Servo
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 8805
Joined: 2002-10-10 06:12pm
Location: Satellite of Love

Post by Darth Servo »

The lawyer does need to defend his client but that does not include filling the courtroom with the bullshit quoted from the asshole lawyer in the OP. Alcohol takes MINUTES to get into your system. Even if you drink a mug thats 100 proof (assuming it doesn't kill you) and get in your car immediately, you will be legally over the 0.08 limit before you get anywhere.

Think about this Mr hot shot Lawyer, if the defendent was actually driving safely, the cop wouldn't have pulled him over in the first place.
"everytime a person is born the Earth weighs just a little more."--DMJ on StarTrek.com
"You see now you are using your thinking and that is not a good thing!" DMJay on StarTrek.com

"Watching Sarli argue with Vympel, Stas, Schatten and the others is as bizarre as the idea of the 40-year-old Virgin telling Hugh Hefner that Hef knows nothing about pussy, and that he is the expert."--Elfdart
User avatar
Durandal
Bile-Driven Hate Machine
Posts: 17927
Joined: 2002-07-03 06:26pm
Location: Silicon Valley, CA
Contact:

Post by Durandal »

Batman wrote:Like hell it does. The spirit of the law would require them to get their clients out of situations loopholes and technicalities of the law got them into, as opposed to using said technicalities to get their clients out of situations the spirit of the law clearly wanted them convicted for.
Absolutely, 100% wrong. It's not called an "adversarial system" because both sides are nice to each other. Defense attorneys have a professional obligation to vigorously represent their clients to the best of their ability. If a DUI lawyer didn't exploit a loophole to get his client off the hook, he could be hauled in front of an ethics committee for incompetent practice.
Damien Sorresso

"Ever see what them computa bitchez do to numbas? It ain't natural. Numbas ain't supposed to be code, they supposed to quantify shit."
- The Onion
Spetulhu
Padawan Learner
Posts: 389
Joined: 2005-08-24 03:25pm
Location: Finland

Post by Spetulhu »

Darth Servo wrote:Think about this Mr hot shot Lawyer, if the defendent was actually driving safely, the cop wouldn't have pulled him over in the first place.
I don't know how you do over there, but we have campaigns against DUI here. Police stop a large number of cars and offer breathalyzer tests to a lot of drivers in a short time. Drunk drivers can and do get caught in these raids, even if they didn't look dangerous.
"We don't negotiate with fish."
-M, High Priest of Shar
Post Reply