Michigan Drunk Driving Defense Lawyer (DUI & DWI)


Client Testimonial:

This is the real thing! I first met Pat back in the 90s when I got charged with some trumped up crap courtesy of our overzealous and rights violating Sheriffs office, and he did a great job representing me. In an age were attorneys treat clients like crap, don’t return phone calls and speak to you worse then you’re persecutors, Pat is a tireless worker who fights for his clients and is not intimidated by heavy hangem high judges or mad dogg prosecutors. I can never remember any calls he didn’t return personally He doesn’t work cheap, butt when you go to you’re sentencing you will never have to worry where your attorney is or where the extra money went that you spent on legal defenses. Pat is a true advocate for his clients. Even the great Geoffrey Fieger didn’t dare mix it up with Pat when the two were guest on my radio show. You wanna save a few bucks, go with one of these ham and egger attorneys whose main concern is there firms financial gain, and when you’re a couple of grand lighter and still facing a jail sentence, you will know I was right. And do the same thing I did when I tried to save a few bucks, and say I should’ve use Patrick Barone.

Sample Michigan OWI Cases

Case #20 - Michigan DLAD - Implied Consent Hearing


People vs. M.W.

Hearing Officer Hopkins

The Arresting Officer in this case testified that he responded to the scene of a property damage accident.  When he arrived, another Officer advised him that they were looking for the driver in the nearby field.  The suspect was later found in the field, laying face down.  When approached, he stood up with keys to "the truck" in his hand. A very strong odor of intoxicants was noted, along with red, watery and glassy eyes.  He also admitted to drinking three or four beers.

Field sobriety tests were administered, including the horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN), walk-and-turn and one-leg stand.  The suspect was unable to perform any of these to the satisfaction of the officer, and he was arrested for OUIL.  He refused to submit to a breath test, and a warrant for blood was obtained.  The Officer also testified that prior to asking the suspect to submit to the breath test,  he read the Chemical Test Rights to the suspect from "the form", but did not further identify the form, other than to say it was "pink in color".

We argued that the Officer had failed to meet his burden of proof in that he had not established that the suspect was the driver of the vehicle (in legal jargon, that there was no "corpus delicti"), and therefore, that the arrest was unlawful.  We also argued that the Officer had failed to meet his burden of proof relative to the Chemical Test Rights because he had not indicated specifically what the rights were, and because the "form" was not produced or properly identified, there was no evidence on the record that the implied consent statute had been satisfied.

The Hearing Officer issued a written opinion indicating that our appeal was granted.  The opinion indicates "[A]s counsel for the petitioner noted at the hearing the form provided to the police to read the Chemical Test Rights from is not called a "DI177" as the officer testified to at this hearing.  Without something in the record to establish with some specificity what Chemical Test Rights the officer advised the petitioner (sic) of I can not find that the petitioner was properly advised of the Chemical Test Rights request by statute".

 

Because the Petitioner's appeal was granted his operating privileges were not suspended for six months based on the alleged refusal to submit to a chemical test.

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Get a FREE confidential CASE EVALUATION on your Michigan OWI/OWVI/DUI by calling (248) 306-9161 , or filling out this consultation request form. Call now, there's no obligation!

To learn more, order a FREE DVD of Mr. Barone's "Practical Law" interview where he discusses DUI defense tactics.  We look forward to hearing from you!


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Michigan DUI Legal Process:

Co-authored by Attorney Patrick Barone, The DUI Book is a valuable resource for the accused. It contains over 600 pages of information and answers about all stages of a drunk driving case beginning with pre-arrest, arrest, post-arrest, pre-trial, trial and carrying through all the way through to appeal. Here is a glossary excerpt.

Michigan OWI FAQ
Learn what the police, the courts and other attorneys don't want you to know about your Michigan OWI/DUI case, and what you should do right now to increase your chances of winning!

The 9 Most Successful Defenses
Find out what you can do right now to change the outcome of your Michigan case.

New Developments in DUI Defense
Current case law and issues affecting Michigan DUIs.

The 7 Worst Mistakes Lawyers Make
Discover the worst mistakes lawyers often make in defending DUI cases BEFORE you hire a lawyer to represent you - so that you can exclude them.

The Top 5 Biggest Mistakes of the DUI Accused
Learn how to avoid the worst mistakes made over and over again by people accused of DUI.

Why I defend DUI cases
A good discussion of the unreliability of evidence and general unfairness in today's drunk driving prosecutions, from noted DUI practitioner Edward Fiandach of New York.

The Ten Commandments For Ethically And Effectively Representing Clients at Trial
How to be Sure the DUI Attorney You Hire to Handle Your Pending Drunk Driving Case will Provide the Best Possible Representation, by William Head.

Five Myths About Defending Accused Drunk Drivers
One of the best DUI attorneys in the nation, William C. Head of Atlanta, GA, discusses the myths and realities of fighting a drunk driving charge.

Michigan DUI Law Video
Some helpful information in video format on DUI issues from Patrick Barone.

Links
Find a Top DUI Lawyer in Your State.


More Press and Info on Attorney Patrick Barone:

New! - Press Release on Heidi's Law - New Michigan Drunk Driving Law

Michigan DUI Defense Book
Attorney Barone's unpublished draft of his drunk driving defense guide for Michigan Lawyers.