Police Oppose Anti-lying Policy

Should a police officer have to be ordered to tell the truth?

Police lie about DUIMy office and I have litigated thousands of DUI and criminal cases all over Pennsylvania.  In this time I have met hundreds of Pennsylvania police officers.  In my opinion, most are very sincere in trying to perform their sworn duties with integrity.  However, some are not so honorable.  A few outright lie.  In many criminal matters, especially DUI, the police officer’s opinion and testimony is a main part of the case against the citizen accused.  When an officer is “fudging the details” or outright lying, this presents a huge problem for truth and justice which is the supposed currency of our courts.  It is very sad to say, but the actual confirmation of police officers not telling the truth is unfortunately much more common than you might think.  With dashcameras in patrol cars, the difference between truthful testimony and hyperbole to “win” a case can be discovered and exposed. 

To illustrate this, here is a recent story out of Boston.

Edward Davis defies cops’ union with his anti-lying edict

Bucking anticipated union opposition, Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis decreed yesterday that any officer caught lying on the job, in court testimony or to the department’s Internal Affairs unit would be fired.

Think about this for a second.  Lying has become such big issue that the Police Commissioner had to issue a new policy banning lying and penalizing it with automatic termination.  What's even more disturbing is that the Police Union is opposing these sanctions as being too strict.  This is absolutely outrageous.  A police officer lying is a very serious transgression.  Take this scenario.  A person is accused of a DUI and is convicted due to tainted evidence and a lying police officer.  That person faces license suspension, fines and even jail time for a crime they didn't commit.  They lose their job, their integrity, and their self-esteem- and the police officer shrugs it off as a “white lie”.  That's not fair.

Lying police officers have no place in law enforcement.  If they lie they cannot be trusted to uphold the law.  I wholeheartedly support Commissioner Davis' one-strike-and-you're-out policy and wish Pennsylvania would enact a similar policy.  Police should be trustworthy and uphold the law by following the law and reporting the truth.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification through NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Juries want forensic science in DUI cases: Interview by Lisa Bloom with Justin McShane

Catch this interview with national TV legal analyst Lisa Bloom and Justin McShane, a Harrisburg DUI Lawyer.  They discus the way that juries look at forensic science and crave it.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

For Liberty's sake: At least we aren't Canadians: Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere

One of the great things that can be said about Americans and especially folks from Pennsylvania is that we enjoy our liberty.  We are a nation full of people who are free, in a large part, to do what we want free of government intrusion and government overreach into our private lives.

Canada, which is a fine country, and its motorists does not enjoy the same protection that we as Americans have against unwanted and baseless stops of motorists while about their way.

This leads me to write, at least in this one sense:  "For Liberty's sake:  At least we aren't Canadians:  Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere"

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer R_I_D_E_ program

(Pictured above:  actual R.I.D.E. enforcement)

In the effort to eradicate the dangers of dunk driving, which in itself is a laudable goal, the Canadians have settled the matter in favor of interrupting liberty of innocent motorists and allowing the government to totally intrude with no rational reason, basis or cause by stopping all vehicles for any or no reason whatsoever.

It is called the R.I.D.E program which stands for  "Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere" program.

I have written twice before on roadblocks:

The Canadian Approach:

The Canadian model is to stop nearly all cars with no level of suspicion of violation of the law, with no clues of impairment and even for no reason.  They set up trailers with Intoxilyzers, phones, etc.  Process, tow and release....

Reasonable suspicion of alcohol in the body results in a roadside demand. Refusal of the roadside demand is a criminal offense with the same penalty as over .08.

But is this a better and more effective method?

According to one newspaper coverage of the R.I.D.E. program (OPP Wraps up Festive R.I.D.E.):

[The] Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) officers were out in full force and checked over 1,174,224 vehicles on OPP patrolled roadways during this year’s Festive R.I.D.E. (Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere) initiative.

This year’s initiative was conducted from November 27 through to January 4, 2010. In the process, OPP officers issued 432 administrative driver’s licence suspensions (ADLS) for criminal code related drinking and driving offences and a further 709 ADL suspensions for a Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) in the .05 and .08 range. OPP laid a total of 5,329 charges as a result of this year’s initiative, 298 of which were for impaired driving, over .08 BAC or for refusal to comply with a demand to provide a breath sample. The remaining 5,031 charges were for other Criminal Code, Highway Traffic Act, or Liquor Licence Act offences.

Comparatively, during the 2008 Festive R.I.D.E., OPP officers checked 884,729 vehicles, made 319 arrests for criminal code alcohol related offences and issued 1,137 ADL suspensions.

 So, let's delve into these numbers a little...

2010 R.I.D.E. results- November 27 through to January 4, 2010

    Arrest Judgment    
    Test and Arrest Test and Release Totals
Actual BAC BAC >.08 (+) 298 0 298
  BAC <.08 (-) (innocent) 0  1,173,926 1,173,926
  Totals  298  1,173,926 1,174,224

 

  • The Base Rate to be derived from these statistics is calculated by dividing 298/1174224=.00025
  • False Positive Rate=False Positive(stops of sober people)/Sober=1.00-Specificity=1173926/1174224=.9997
  • Likelihood Ratio=1.0/.9997=1.0003
  • Efficiency of this method=Actual BAC greater than .08/Total number stops=298/1174224=.00171

With an overall efficiency rate of less than two percent (2%), it seems the answer is clear that it is not.  This method results in 99.97 percent (99.97%) false positive rate.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

CNN and CBS news analyst Lisa Bloom interviews Pennsylvania DUI Lawyer Justin McShane on DUID and Marijuana

CNN and CBS news analyst Lisa Bloom interviews Pennsylvania DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane about Driving Under the Influence of Drugs, Marijuana metabolites, second hand marijuana smoke and the importance of pharmacology in DUID cases.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Caught: DUI Breath Test Center bad acts

Why there should be cameras in DUI processing centers, blood draw areas and even labs....

It's not just a Florida problem folks.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Police complain about tweeting and FB'ing leading to avoidance of DUI Checkpoints

The (Baron) Münchhausen-Trilemma, also called Agrippa's Trilemma, is a philosophical term coined to stress the purported impossibility to prove any truth even in the fields of logic and mathematics.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Münchhausen(Pictured to the Left is Baron Münchhausen)

The following news article reminded me of this:   Twitter Helps Drunk Drivers Avoid Roadblocks

Within it the writer writes:

Of course the police know this [people drink and drive], and strive to discourage this behavior by setting up lots of drinking and driving roadblocks. And in general, the police want people to know there will be roadblocks out there, but they certainly don’t want drivers to know exactly where and when they are. And that’s why there’s some fear among the police that an increasing number of people will use Twitter to alert others about drinking and driving roadblocks tonight.

 

 

 

Simply put, the trilemma is a breakdown of all possible proofs for a theory into three general types:

  • The circular argument, in which theory and proof support each other;
  • The regressive argument, in which each proof requires a further proof;
  • The axiomatic argument, which rests on accepted precepts

The first two methods of reasoning are fundamentally weak, and because the Greek skeptics advocated deep questioning of all accepted values they refused to accept proofs of the third sort. The trilemma, then, is the decision among the three equally unsatisfying options.

Saying that the use of twitter, internet sites and Facebook to publicize roadblock locations and "ruin them" is to engage in this (Baron) Münchhausen-Trilemma.  Simply put, it is silly.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Lisa Bloom Interview with Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane

Lisa Bloom of CBS and CNN interviews Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Justin McShane.  In this interview ignition interlock devices issues and malfunctions are discussed.  Also what makes the McShane Firm different from all other Pennsylvania DUI law firms is discussed.  The question of will alcohol inpatient treatment help me is addressed.  Finally, Driving Under the Influence of Drugs is also discussed.

 

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Some Humor: Rent your own designated driver

Recently, this blog has been referred to as being too serious.  There is not a lot of humor that surrounds either allegations of DUI or actual DUI.  So, I do not write about the traditional cutesy things.  I found this clip to be a justifiable exception:  Rent your own designated driver.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Pennsylvania DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane is Interviewed by CNN's Lisa Bloom on Juries in DUI cases

Lisa Bloom of CNN asks Justin McShane to comment on the types of Juries that we see in Central Pennsylvania DUI cases.  Also they discuss the move towards stronger and tougher DUI laws in Pennsylvania.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Profiling a Drunk Driver on the Road: Driving While Texting or DUI?

Imagine, you are in Pennsylvania.  It is late at night.  It is after 2 am which is the typical closing time for bars here in Pennsylvania.  You are a police officer.  You see a car that you do not recognize in front of you.  It starts to weave.  Then, when there is no other traffic around it crosses the lines.  You stop the car.  What do you think?  DUI, right?

Wrong. 

It's DWT or driving while texting.  It is ubiquitous. This is why you cannot profile a drunk driver.

 

(Watch the video to see DWT is worse than DUI)

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

DUI or a Stroke, Some Cops Can't Tell the Difference

Several weeks ago, I blogged on the Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) protocol and specifically the Finger-to-Nose Test and the Romberg Balance Test and I half jokingly wrote the following:

In that post I concluded that

Like many tests used at roadside [or in the DRE protocol], the designed and intended use of a legitimate and useful clinical screening test has been literally bastardized and hijacked by police to now be used as a supposed indicator for possible alcohol or drug impaired driving.

Well, it is sad but true, neurological events can be misinterpreted by under-educated police officers as being impairment leading them to falsely arrest people for DUI.  Stroke and neurological episodes can look like impairment or being drunk. 

Consider this sad story:

Man wrongly handcuffed for DUI suspicion while having stroke
By Bryon Saxton (Standard-Examiner Davis Bureau)

LAYTON -- An Ogden man suspected of driving while intoxicated, handcuffed and put in the back of a patrol car while in the process of suffering a stroke, wants the Davis County Sheriff's Office to better train deputy paramedics to recognize stroke symptoms.

"I think they just need to know better, how to treat people when they have a medical condition," said 46-year-old Mark Wager. "The first thing they think is that they are intoxicated."

Wager, a Hill Air Force Base employee who filed a written complaint to the Davis County Commission, said he is not seeking monetary damages from the county or to have the deputy involved disciplined. But he wants the department to provide training for its paramedics to recognize the difference between an intoxicated driver and a stroke victim.

On Feb. 6 while on the 700 South on-ramp near Clearfield, Wager said, he pulled to the side of the road, sensing something was wrong.

"I stepped outside the vehicle and collapsed," he said.

Wager said two people stopped to help him back into his vehicle, with a deputy paramedic arriving a short time later. The paramedic asked him what was wrong and told him to get out of his vehicle to take a sobriety test.

"They tried to make me walk, but I couldn't walk," Wager said.

Wager said one of five officers who later came to the scene did ask if he was experiencing a stroke, but because Wager wasn't certain what he was experiencing, he refused medical treatment.

"They told me I was under arrest for a DUI," Wager said.

That resulted in the officers cuffing his hands behind his back, placing him on a medical stretcher, wheeling him over to a patrol car and placing him in the rear seat of the car.

Blood draw

Before taking him to the jail, deputies stopped at Davis Hospital and Medical Center in Layton, Wager said, to have his blood drawn to see what was in his system.

"The officers bugged the doctor, asking that (Wager) be released to them. But the hospital refused to do that," he said.

Wager was flown by helicopter to University of Utah Medical Center, where he spent several weeks receiving treatment for a stroke that has left him with a "useless" left arm.

Wager said it took this long to bring his story to light because he spent time recovering and deliberating whether to pursue legal action against the county.

Different story

The incident report filed by Deputy Paramedic David Passmore with the sheriff's office tells a different story.

Passmore stated he asked Wager at least two times whether he had any medical problems, to which Wager replied he had fibromyalgia.

"I asked him if he was feeling the same as he usually does with his illness. He replied that in general he was, but that he was having numbness and tingling in his legs. He also stated that he gets this way sometimes with the fibromyalgia," the report states.

To gauge his mental status, Passmore said he asked Wager several questions which he was able to answer. He then asked him if he wanted to be transported to the hospital for further assessment, to which Wager replied he did not and signed the refusal form for transport in the ambulance that had arrived.

"Based on his refusal for transport and his inability to stand alone, I placed him in custody for suspicion of DUI. I placed him in loose fitting handcuffs and asked him if they were too tight, he replied that they were not, and I double locked them," Passmore said.

Wager was taken to the hospital for medical clearance prior to being taken to jail, Passmore said. But hospital staff determined Wager was experiencing a cerebral vascular incident, resulting in his being released to hospital staff.

Training changes

State Emergency Medical Services officials say there is an emphasis in training pre-hospital providers, such as deputy paramedics, in advanced life support, to place more focus on patients suffering from a stroke. They hope to have the training in place next year.

The state certifies and recertifies every four years about 11,000 pre-hospital providers, including paramedics, and in the last six months it has put more focus on changing the requirements for certification to increase its hours of training, said Paul Patrick, director of the Bureau of Emergency Medical Services.

"A stroke can mask intoxication," Patrick said. "The symptoms can look alike."

In 30 years of being a deputy paramedic, Lt. Brad Wilcox, also the Davis County Sheriff's Office public information officer, said he has rarely come across a driver experiencing a stroke.

"It is so extremely rare when it does happen," Wilcox said. "I could count with two or three fingers the cases that I have seen."

Wager said he finds himself in a difficult position because of the incident.

"If they wouldn't have taken me in, who knows what would have happened?" he said.

But had the paramedic told him he may be suffering a stroke, Wager said, he wouldn't have refused medical treatment that night.

Amazing, but true.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Pennsylvania DUI Laws: An Interview with Pennsylvania DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane by Lisa Bloom of CNN and CBS News

Pennsylvania DUI Laws:  the penalties and consequences are discussed between Justin J. McShane, Esquire, who is an lawyer who specializes in using forensic science for the benefit of the citizen among us who has been accused of a crime or a DUI and Lisa Bloom, a CNN/CBS news analyst.  She also asks about the science of DUI and why Attorney McShane thinks it is important to not only know it, but to also teach it as he does.  Watch this compelling interview between Justin J. McShane and CNN/CBS news analyst Lisa Bloom.

 

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns
criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate
By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer comments on Inaccurate Blood Alcohol Content and Bad BAC Results

"It could NEVER happen."

"Blood Alcohol Content results can never be wrong."

"No Government lab or private lab used in Pennsylvania has ever been wrong."

"Impossible."

"We double and triple checks things before we report them."

"These machines self check and report all errors."

These are the some of the silly things that Government bench scientists actually say under oath.

John C. Ensslin of The Gazette in his article on December 11, 2009 "Flawed blood alcohol tests by police lab jeopardize DUI cases" is proof that these tests are not perfect.  There is error.  It can be pervasive and systemic.  The scary part, it has definitely happened before here in Pennsylvania DUI cases and will likely happen again.  Although I caught the story when it broke, I was holding off posting about it as I wanted to know more details as to the source fo the problem  Shamefully, the State has sought to suppress the source of the problem and play "hide the ball".

 Harrisburg DUI Lawyer lab contamination

Ensslin reports:

Prosecutors have begun contacting lawyers for 82 defendants whose drunken driving charges were based in part upon incorrect blood alcohol tests by the Colorado Springs police crime lab.

In each of the cases, test results reported by the forensic chemist unit of the Metro Crime Lab were higher that the actual results, police officials disclosed Friday.

Fourth Judicial District prosecutors were unable to identify specific cases where charges had been dismissed or reduced so far.

......

So far, tests by the manufacturer have determined that the incorrect results were not the result of an equipment failure, police said.

..........

As a result of the discovery, the crime lab is re-analyzing about 1,000 blood alcohol test results taken since January 2009.

.........

“That number [of 82] could grow,” Whitlock said. “We’re continuing to do follow-up.”

Whitlock said the on-going investigation is trying to determine if they were the result of a human error or a procedural error.

Harrisburg DUI lawyer lab cartoon

 

A colleague and a friend of mine, Ron Moore of California once remarked:

So you are looking for a new era of scientific integrity after the NAS report? Won't happen. There is no such thing as scientific integrity, only human integrity practiced in the area of science. And human integrity always has been what human integrity always will be: subject to failure.

I could not agree more.  This is why Blood Alcohol Testing results for DUI must be independently verified, transparent, traceable, reliable, accurate, precise and true.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin J McShane Esquire earns criminal law certification throguh NBTA

Board Certified Criminal Trial Advocate By the National Board of Trial Advocacy
A Pennsylvania Supreme Court Approved Agency

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin McShane Esquire Interviewed by CBS/CNN legal analyst Lisa Bloom

Justin McShane, Esquire, Harrisburg DUI Lawyer, is interviewed by CNN Legal Analyst, The Early Show commentator, and CBS News Legal Analyst Lisa Bloom

Here, Justin McShane who is a DUI Lawyer in Harrisburg, of the McShane Firm, LLC discusses with Lisa Bloom the science and the technology in DUI prosecutions as well as the potential sources of error when it comes to breath and blood testing.  The reasons someone who is accused of a DUI should call an attorney immediately is also addressed in this video.  Other topics such as Pennsylvania DUI expungement and Driving Under the Influence of Drugs (DUID) are discussed.  The popular question of "Should I do the roadside tests?" is asked.  Watch to hear the answer and the reasoning.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin

 

DUI on a Horse and Buggy: Funny (not really) but is it a legal arrest?

It seems that about once a year in the Harrisburg area someone gets arrested for a DUI while either riding a horse or while attempting to drive a horse and buggy.

We had our latest one and it hit the national media.  The national media was all over it, of course...

Pa. police arrest Amish man in buggy for DUI

(AP)

LANCASTER, Pa. — Police in central Pennsylvania arrested an Amish man on drunk driving charges over the weekend after he was found asleep in his moving buggy. Police said a 22-year-old man was slumped over and asleep in a slow-moving buggy on Sunday night.

An off-duty officer from nearby reported seeing the horse pulling the buggy at a walking pace as it straddled the center line.

Police said a breathalyzer test snowed the man's blood-alcohol content was 0.18, more than twice the 0.08 legal limit for drivers.

Pennsylvania DUI while on a horse and buggy


As funny and as quaint as this story may seem, it involves a real life human being who probably does not have access to the internet to learn that this type of arrest is in fact probably illegal and improper under prevailing Pennsylvania case law.

The law is settled and has been so since 2004 by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. Noel that arresting a horse bound rider pursuant to 75 PS 3103 and subjecting him or her to the provisions of the Vehicle Code and specifically DUI is impermissible as the authorizing statute (law) (75 PS 3103) was found to be unconstitutionally vague.

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer Justin McShane Interviewed by CBS/CNN legal analyst Lisa Bloom

Harrisburg DUI Lawyer, Justin McShane is interviewed by CNN Legal Analyst, The Early Show commentator, and CBS News Legal Analyst Lisa Bloom

Here, Justin McShane who is a DUI Lawyer in Harrisburg, of the McShane Firm, LLC discusses with Lisa Bloom the specialization that is required to be one of today's top DUI attorneys in the nation and the specialized training that is required.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney invited to lecture to over 200 DUI Attorneys in Connecticut

My good friend and National College for DUI Defense, Inc. colleague Jay Ruane of Connecticut is hosting a DUI/OUI seminar this Friday, December 4, 2009 entitled:  "Defending OUI cases in CT Training & Seminar".

It will be held at the Legislative Office Building – Hearing Room 2C in Hartford, CT

It is presented by the Division of Public Defender Services and the CT Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and Ruane Attorneys at Law.  I will post more on it.

I am all set to present on the intriguing emerging field of Pennsylvania DUI defense and national DUI defense in the form of Driving Under the Influence of Drugs (DUID).  It is a highly specialized and difficult area that combines pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and psychomotor function.  It is indeed the wave of the future.  Very few attorneys have developed and expanded their knowledge base to include this important future area of DUI law.

 

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney invited to speak to Connecticut DUI Attorneys


AGENDA

8:45 – 9:00        Introduction & Welcome

9:00 – 10:15        The Draeger 9250
            Hansueli Ryser, VP, Draeger Safety Equipment

10:15 – 10:30    Q & A with Hansueli Ryser

10:30 – 10:50    20 Important DUI Cases in 20 Minutes
            Atty. Teresa DiNardi and Atty. Sean Barrett , Ruane Attorneys

10:50 – 11:00    Morning Break

11:00 – 11:30    Using Melendez Diaz in DUI Cases
            Atty. Chris Duby, North Haven, CT

11:30 – 12:15     Cross-Examining Dr. Powers  
             Director of Controlled Substances Lab, CT
            Attys. Jim and Jay Ruane, Ruane Attorneys

12:15 – 12:45    Basics of the SFSTs
            Atty. Jen Zito, President-elect, CCDLA

12:45 – 1:00        What Changed in the New DUI Law?
            Zachary Reiland, Legal Intern, Ruane Attorneys

1:00 – 2:00        Lunch Break

2:00 – 2:45        Cross-Examination of the Field Test Officer
            Atty. Jack Diamond, Boston, MA

2:45 – 3:30        Drug DUI Case Defense
            Atty. Justin McShane, Harrisburg, PA

3:30 – 3:45        Afternoon Break

3:45 – 4:30        Defending Against a Dual IR/EC Test
            Atty. Evan Levow, New Jersey
 

 Come on out and see us.  There are more than two hundred (200) people signed up so far.  Why not join us?

 

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Get a Pennsylvania DUI and lose your wife? Not far fetched. Florida Prosecutor marries DUI Defendant's ex-wife

In the category of it always could be worse, I have found THE DUI case that if the newspaper accounts are true, really takes the cake.

The story comes out of the St. Petersburg Times and was written by Curtis Krueger.  The article is entitled "Prosecutor in DUI case marries the suspect's ex"


 Pennsylvania DUI Attorney thinks a prosecutor marrying a defendant's ex while he is in jail is outrageous

(Imagine being twice prosecuted, jailed for years and then finding out that your recently divorced wife marries the prosecutor who pushed for the long prison sentence)

Within the article, Krueger reports (summarized as follows):

 

The driver has a bottle of Jack Daniel's in his red Jeep and whiskey coursing through his veins as he blows past a stop sign in Riverview. He smashes into a car, killing a 24-year-old woman who is pregnant with her first child.

So a prosecutor steps in, ready to send the driver - an Army captain - to prison.

The prosecutor's name is Louis Birdsong, also an Army captain. At this point, in April 2001, he does not know this case will lead to two different trials, one military and one civilian.

He certainly does not know this case will change his own life.

In between the two trials, Birdsong develops a friendly relationship with the driver's recently divorced ex-wife. And three years after the trials, he marries her.

The driver, now incarcerated at the Cross City Correctional Institution, was stunned when he learned this year that his ex-wife and his prosecutor had married each other.

He said he now thinks Birdsong pushed to have him prosecuted twice in this case, which more than doubled his prison time. He claims Birdsong did this "to make it so that I can get more time and stay in prison longer so they can have their life together without me being involved in it."

He has filed a bar complaint against the prosecutor and tried to get the military to launch an investigation.

...

Piotrowski got a 13 1/2-year sentence. That was considered comparable to what Piotrowski would have faced in the state courts, so prosecutors in both systems were pleased.

Case closed. But not for long.

--

Not long after, word got to the Hillsborough State Attorney's staff that Piotrowski might serve only five to seven years in military prison - far less than they first believed.

State Attorney Mark Ober was concerned. His office had deferred to the military, thinking its justice system would prove swifter and result in a similar sentence.

Sharon Morgan Vollrath, then a Hillsborough prosecutor, said she recalled discussing the matter with Birdsong. He said "that it looked like there was going to be an issue with gain time."

The State Attorney's Office file contains a "case summary" that suggests Birdsong's involvement, although it does not mention him by name. It says:

"After the courts martial proceeding, the prosecuting JAG officer contacted me and said he had just learned that because of (Piotrowski's) status as a physician's assistant, he was going to get more gain time (than) had previously been determined he could actually serve five to seven years."

Piotrowski, 51, who was interviewed in the prison, acknowledged wrongdoing in the crash and said he thinks about his victims every day.

But he also said he feels his second prosecution was unjust.

"I believe (Birdsong) went back and manipulated the state of Florida," he said. Ober, Vollrath and another Hillsborough prosecutor sharply deny it.

The state attorney charged Piotrowski in Circuit Court in early 2002 and made an offer that in retrospect sounds good: a 15-year prison sentence if he would plead guilty. He turned it down, went to trial and was convicted of DUI-manslaughter and vehicular homicide. His new sentence: 30 years, served at the same time as his military sentence.

--

It's not clear how close Birdsong and Piotrowski's ex-wife had become toward the end of 2001 and beginning of 2002, when the State Attorney's Office was deciding whether to prosecute Piotrowski a second time.

But the two, who were 34 and 35, did know each other. During the August 2001 court-martial, Rebecca was a witness for the prosecution. She said she was struggling to pay bills, and Birdsong had offered helpful advice.

After the court-martial, she still struggled financially, and sometimes called Birdsong for advice. She later wrote in a statement:

"Since Captain Birdsong was able to help me before trial, I called him again after trial when more and more creditors were calling me. I thought perhaps he could help me again and not charge me $200 an hour. He did. He made calls and wrote letters trying to help me. As time passed, we became friends. It was good for me because I could talk to him about all the issues I faced because he already knew all the circumstances. During the darkest days of my life, after the trial, he helped me when I needed it."

After the court-martial, in the summer of 2002, Rebecca moved to Fayetteville, N.C. Meanwhile, the Army moved Birdsong to Charlottesville, Va.

Rebecca said she stayed in touch with Birdsong because "he was the only one who had provided good advice."

One weekend when she knew he had a big project, she suggested he drive to her house in Fayetteville. "I told him that he could spread his papers out, work on the computer and watch the children while I was away." During this visit, he also shared the story of why he had filed for divorce recently, and said "he was devastated by the loss of his family."

Birdsong continued visiting frequently, and "played with the kids nonstop and read them books anytime they asked," Rebecca later wrote. Those were the two children from Rebecca's marriage to Piotrowski. She added:

Some time in spring 2003 when we were walking after dinner, he reached out and took my hand. He was scared and so was I, so we almost ignored that it had happened. But we were changing."

This was still before the second trial, in Hillsborough. In the trial that May, Birdsong's role would be much more limited. His purpose was mainly to read from a transcript explaining what had happened in the court-martial.

Nonetheless, he was a prosecution witness. At that same time, his relationship with Rebecca was deepening. She wrote:

"Louis moved to Woodbridge, Virginia, sometime in May 2003. He had told us about a townhouse he had bought, and one weekend in early May he asked us to consider moving up to the DC area to be with him."

Rebecca and the kids moved into Birdsong's townhouse that July. They married in June 2006.

--

As a prison inmate, Piotrowski said he has been frustrated that he has rarely been able to talk at any length to his two children from his marriage to Rebecca. So earlier this year, Piotrowski's brother Mark searched online for Rebecca's addresses. A familiar name came up at her address: Birdsong. That's how the family learned of the marriage.

Piotrowski has filed a complaint against Birdsong with the Virginia Bar, because he is licensed there, although currently deployed to Iraq.

The complaint says Birdsong's relationship with Rebecca violated ethical standards for lawyers. Birdsong sent the bar a written response, which includes a note about a detailed declaration he had written about the case for an appeal, in which he did not mention his relationship with Rebecca.

"While I did have a relationship with Rebecca Piotrowski at the time it was submitted, I was neither requested nor required to address that in my declaration," Birdsong wrote. This statement, like others from him and Rebecca quoted in the story, comes from his response to the Virginia Bar. Birdsong and his wife did not want to be interviewed, Birdsong's attorney says.

So did Birdsong break the rules, or violate legal ethical standards? Ober, his former assistant Vollrath and Sean Keefe, another prosecutor on the case, say they don't think so. There is no evidence the relationship had any impact on the way the case was handled, they said.

They do say the relationship surprised them. "Nothing like that ever occurred to me for even a millisecond," Keefe said.

Bob Dekle, a University of Florida law professor and longtime prosecutor, listened to a description of the case and said "you can certainly make the case for that being an appearance of impropriety. Now whether or not you can make that case stick is another question."

I struggled with how to comment further on this one.  It seems so very outrageous to me.  What do you folks think?

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney talks about the DUI Statistics Game

It is that time of the year again in Harrisburg and all of Pennsylvania where we celebrate Thanksgiving by setting up roadblocks and by doing so to allow the Government to quasi-invade and violate our personal liberties and freedoms by stopping us along our lawful way.  It seems that Pennsylvania DUI roadblocks are being announced all over the Harrisburg, Carlisle, Hershey, Lebanon, York, Reading, Lancaster, Gettysburg and Chambersburg areas.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney knows how to challenge roadblocks

(An amazing 4 lane highway totally shut down for a Pennsylvania DUI checkpoint)

So, why is this allowed?

It is legally supposedly justified, in part, based upon statistics.

Pennsylvania DUi statistics lie

(Do statistics really matter in Pennsylvania DUI?)

In the state of Pennsylvania supposedly DUI offenses last year allegedly accounted for more than 2,100 crashes in Pennsylvania.  In 2008, according to fuzzy math statistics, more than 53,000 people were arrested for Driving Under the Influence (DUI) in Pennsylvania.  Additionally, last year more than 8,500 of those were arrested for what we call DUID of Driving Under the Influence of Drugs or Controlled Substances.

While these statistics have never been independently verified by an outside source, they are at the very least formidable.

As a Pennsylvania DUI Attorney we look to challenge the validity and legality of Pennsylvania DUI roadblocks.  Tomorrow we will look into what is required to justify a Pennsylvania DUI roadblock.

But here is my open question of this post, what are the true source of these statistics?  How are they verified?  Also, where are the statistics of people who have been unjustly accused of a Pennsylvania DUI?  How many people have had their cases dismissed or have been found not guilty? 

Simply being accused of a crime is not evidence to be used in a criminal case for a Pennsylvania DUI.

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Pennsylvania DUI Attorney Stands Up with New Zealand DUI Barrister who is Forced to Take Down his Website

I make no bones about the fact that I am a Pennsylvania DUI Attorney.  In fact I am proud of it.  Very proud it.  I am proud of the fact that I use forensic science to represent the citizen among us who is accused of a DUI.  I advertise it.  I blog about it.  I believe that what I do is right, good, truthful and ethical.  There is a legitimate purpose in making sure that truth and justice occurs in Court on a daily basis.

That being said, not everyone believes that a person accused of DUI deserves a defense, an advocate or even a lawyer.

Sadly, that appears to be the case in Auckland, New Zealand where a well-intentioned and by all accounts honorable barrister by the name of Patrick Winkler was pressured into taking down his website.  You can read the relevant news story written by Leigh Van Der Stoep "Lawyer backs down over drink-drive website". 

You can actually see the "offensive" website thanks to Google caching here.

It is a shame that this happened to Barrister Patrick Winkler.  We stand here in support of him and wish him all the best in life.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

Drive your car allegedly drunk, lose your family's car---Amazing!

Can you imagine? 

You get accused of a DUI and then as a consequence on top of everything else, you forfeit your family's car? 

Your friend loans you his or her car, you get stopped and arrested for a DUI and your friend loses his or her car?

What sort of bizzaro world is this?

 

We do not have to worry about that here in Pennsylvania, but in other parts of the United States this is the law.  It was the law in Illinois.  Well, not any more in DuPage County Illinois at least thanks to the Huclean effort of expert DUI attorney Donald Ramsell, Esquire.

 

This was extensively covered in the Chicago Sun Times article entitled "Judge: Law allowing seizure of drunk drivers' vehicles is unconstitutional".  In summary form the reporter writes that

A DuPage County judge ruled that Illinois’ vehicle forfeiture statute gives the state too broad of authority to impound vehicles, particularly in cases where a vehicle’s co-owner loses a car despite not being charged or where an accused offender faces only misdemeanor charges.

The advocate who argued to have the statute ruled unconsitutional was quoted as saying:

"In some instances, innocent spouses, employers and ex-girlfriends of the drivers have had to wait over two years for the return of their vehicles due to the failure to have prompt reviews,” said Wheaton DUI lawyer Donald Ramsell, who represented the three accused drunk drivers.

Common sense and the constiution wins one.  Attorney Ramsell is one of my personal friends and is a superior advocate for the citizen among us who is accused of a violation of the law and now also the innocent owners who are impacted by the draconian law of civil forfeiture of the vehicle.  Great job to Attorney Donald Ramsell.

 

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
You can follow me on Twitter , Facebook or Linkedin.

WellSpan is to be commended, but why people who have been convicted for decades of a DUI should be upset

On Wednesday and Thursday of this past week, Rick Fulton of the Gettysburg Times, wrote reported that WellSpan hospital system in Central Pennsylvania will no longer support or offer to provide blood testing for Court use of Blood Alcohol Content testing (BAC). The BAC testing, of course, is so important in a DUI prosecution and is one of the fundamental pieces of, and oftentimes the only, evidence against a citizen among us who has been accused of a DUI Rick Fulton wrote a great article.  You can access it in full here “Hospital explains ban on DUI tests”.
 

It presents two main issues as to why the Hospital system will no longer offer or support BAC testing. I am proud to say that our firm, The McShane Firm, LLC has been successfully litigating both aspects in Pennsylvania. In fact, to our knowledge no other attorney or firm has advanced these types of defenses in Central Pennsylvania and likely not in the entire Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
 

In his article reporter Rick Fulton wrote:

 

William Lavery, manager, WellSpan Office of Health Public Relations & Communication at Gettysburg Hospital, confirmed Wednesday that the testing service was being discontinued at the hospital, but that the facility will continue to draw the blood.

[William] Lavery, manager, WellSpan Office of Health Public Relations & Communication at Gettysburg Hospital] stated there were two fundamental reasons for the discontinuation of the service, the first concerning accreditation of the hospital’s laboratory and the second relating to increased demands on the laboratory.

Regarding accreditation, he said, “In our case, the hospital laboratory is unable to meet a new testing regulation introduced by the College of American Pathologists. They generate standards and they are our primary accreditation agency.”

“If we were to lose accreditation by not adhering to their regulations, we’d really jeopardize the lab’s primary role of providing health care to our patients,” Lavery said.

In addition, the legal system, particularly DUI defense attorneys, are demanding more and more from laboratories that conduct BAC testing.

This is causing an increasing drain on the hospital’s resources.

“It’s (legal demands) becoming an increasing impact on our lab resources...trying to meet the legal requirements that these cases (generate),” he said.

“More and more,” Lavery stated, DUI defense attorneys subject the hospital lab’s to strenuous (expectations), which include responding to subpoenas that go beyond the hospital’s ability to respond to them.

“Attorneys are mandating that a clinical (hospital) lab be able to demonstrate forensic abilities, to respond to documents, provide staff competency documentation...those are things a forensic lab is more equipped to handle,” he stated.

The load and responsibility has caused an “increased demand on our resources...A clinical (hospital) lab may not be able to operate (the same level of service) as a forensic lab,” Lavery stated, pointing out that what is being asked of the hospital’s clinical laboratory are things that a forensic lab deals with routinely.

The majority of the hospitals in the area (south central Pa.), he noted, have already ceased DUI testing, according to the communications manager. “A lot of area hospitals made that decision a couple of years ago.”


I have blogged about this first issue in “Piece of Paper Says Your Guilty”.  It outlines the recent United States Supreme Court decision of Melendez-Diaz and its import.

 

The Real Problem
Now I want to complete the thought of the article and blog about the absolute consensus of the scientific community that hospital blood testing is not forensically acceptable. I will try to explain why as briefly as I can. For over five (5) years, I have personally been leading the fight in Pennsylvania in this area of medicolegal litigation pushing the science or really the lack of forensic reliability of hospital blood BAC testing.

First some background....

In the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, there are various degrees of prohibited BAC levels, called per se levels. They are 0.08, 0.10 and 0.16 with enhanced penalties depending upon what your blood level is. These per se levels are measured as grams percent AND MUST BE expressions of whole blood. A conviction on a per se offense cannot be based upon plasma or serum. The expression of the BAC must be to whole blood and whole blood only.

So, we begin at the beginning, shouldn’t we?


Are hospital blood tests truly whole blood tests?

As shocking as it is to most people, the real answer is NO.

There is but one analytical device that performs a whole blood analysis, it is called a gas chromatograph. It has a detector to allow for quantification which is usually a Flame Ionization Detector. Using a mass spectrometer is the best way of conclusively confirming the analysis, but it is not often used.

So what are they doing?
The hospital based blood test performed at the hospital is scientifically referred to as a plasma enzymatic indirect test based on spectrophotometry (colormetic response) of treated de-proteinzed vortexed, centrifuged aspirated supernate of the original whole blood specimen.

Wow what the heck does that mean? Don't worry keep reading and I promise it will all make sense to you.

We will shorten all of this up and simply refer to it as “hospital blood” or “hospital blood testing”.

Ok. So let’s take it step by step.
 

PROBLEM 1:

An "enzymatic indirect test" means that we are not testing how much ETOH (drinking alcohol or Ethyl Alcohol) is in the whole blood. Instead what we are testing is an indirect measure. We use a known enzyme (NAD+) amount and hope that it will react to ETOH and create a quantifiable result as the two interact resulting in Acetaldehyde+NADH+H+
 

So chemically, it looks like this….
 

Ethyl Alcohol+ NAD+ ----> Acetaldehyde+NADH+H+
 

Instead it is measuring the reaction difference to an enzyme at a specific wavelength. Hospital analysis is by enzyme assay. An enzyme is added to the totally prepared sample. That enzyme (NAD) reacts in the presence of alcohol (and other things) and forms another enzyme (NADH). The amount of NADH is then measured (as relative to the NAD remaining) to determine the amount of alcohol in the sample.


Still don’t follow
? Don't worry, I follow through on all of my promises keep reading.  I will make it clear.

Ok it’s really simple if we relate it to something we know---the good old bathroom scale.

I want you to suppose that you want to know how much your 6 year old daughter weighs. There are basically two (2) ways: a direct way and an indirect way.


What would make the most sense and is the most accurate is to take out your bathroom scale and put your daughter on it and voila, we have the weight. This would be like using a Gas Chromatograph. It is a direct measure of the weight of your daughter.
 

Now, let’s think about another way to try to get at her weight. I suppose you could step on the scale and see how much you weigh (a known), get off the scale and then have your 6 year old daughter hop on your back piggyback style and then both you and her on your back step on the scale having seen what your combined weight is. You both get off. You would then take your combined weight and subtract it from your known weight that you got on the first measurement and voila, you might have her weight.

What happens next? Your spouse who watched the whole escapade looks at you with a puzzled look and says you are silly and she doesn’t understand why you did it this indirect way when the direct way would be easier and more accurate. This is exactly like hospital blood.
 

Makes sense now, right? Good.


In conclusion, indirect measurements are never forensically or scientifically acceptable when there is a direct method available. That is the first reason why hospital blood is forensically and scientifically unacceptable.
 

PROBLEM 2:

Issue number two is the type of analytical measuring device used. It is based on spectrophotometry (a colormetic response). Spectrometry is grossly over simplified as this. Spectrophotometry involves the use of a spectrophotometer. A spectrophotometer is a photometer (a device for measuring light intensity) that can measure intensity as a function of the color (or more specifically the wavelength) of light. Important features of spectrophotometers are spectral bandwidth and linear range of absorption measurement.  It is rooted in Beer's Law.

In short, the sequence of events in a spectrophotometer is as follows:

  1. The light source shines into a monochromator.
  2. A particular output wavelength is selected and beamed at the sample.
  3. The sample absorbs light.

We use an energy source such as a light, and a detector (specifically a photo detector) on the other end of sample chamber. Then we run the sample, or analyte, in-between the energy source and the photo detector. If the analyte is not present, it is smooth sailing as the energy emitted by the energy source should not be impacted (i.e., no loss of signal energy-it remains at the same strength). If there is analyte present, then it will interfere with the energy emitted by the energy source. The photo detector detects less energy. A comparison is made between what we would expect versus what we got as measured by the photodetector.

Colormetric means that there is a color response (lighter or darker in this case) that depends upon the concentration of the analyte.
 

Wow? What does that mean?


Here are good pictures that show what I was conveying.

Think of taking a laser pointer and trying to shine it through a glass of clear water versus a glass of Kool Aid.  The laser pointer will mostly go through the clear water with little loss of signal, but the Kool Aid experiment will result in much less signal going through.  It's that simple.

PROBLEM 3:

The third issue concerns the limitation of the technology itself. As mentioned above, the machine is based upon spctrophotometry and is a colormetric response. As such we need something that is basically pure and clear.  Otherwise, if it is dark and dirty, then the response is not utterly remarkable. In other words, you cannot tell. What is dirty and darker than blood?

Blood is a viscoelastic complex matrix full of a lot of stuff. Hence, plasma is used. Whole blood is defined as blood from which none of the elements have been removed. Plasma is defined as the fluid portion of the blood in which particular components are suspended.  The components that are suspended consist of red corpuscles, white corpuscles and platelets. Whole blood and plasma look very different as one can see below.


So to clean it up, and transform it into plasma, they have to do the following. They have to strip the protein from it. This is done by adding a de-proteinizing agent such as Trichloroacetic Acid (TCA). TCA will bond with the protein and after centrifuging, it will become solid and a noticeable pellet will form at the bottom.

The blood is further transformed through the centrifuging process. Just like anything that is centrifuged, the heavy parts go to the bottom and the lighter parts are separated to the top. This is called the supernate (the top stuff) and the precipitate (the bottom stuff) division. With blood, heavy parts such as the blood’s red blood cells and the pellet from the TCA reaction are at the bottom. The plasma and the alcohol (if there is any) are at the top because they are lighter.  
 

Next the top part is removed by pipetting. This is called aspirating the supernate. [as an aside, one hospital lab surprisingly doesn’t use pipettes to get an accurate amount, but rather simply pours the supernate into a testing cup]. The aspirated supernate then makes its way into the analytical device.

Now if you are paying attention, you might be asking yourself "Hey? What happens to all of the rest of the specimen?"  The answer is that it gets thrown out. It is never analyzed.


PROBLEM 4:
This is the perfect lead into the fourth issue as to why hospital blood is forensically unacceptable. It has to do with the legal requirements to sustain a conviction. As mentioned above, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, there are various degrees of prohibited BAC levels, called per se levels. They are 0.08, 0.10 and 0.16 with enhanced penalties depending upon what your blood level is. These per se levels are measured as grams percent AND MUST BE expressions of whole blood. A conviction on a per se offense cannot be based upon plasma or serum. The expression of the BAC must be to whole blood and whole blood only.

So what do they try to do?

 

So in typical lawyer fashion, we try to force the round peg into the square whole and force a “conversion” factor that is supposed to adjust or convert the raw number for that big legal problem.

Sounds good in theory if you don’t mind the indirectness, but here is the dirty little secret. The scientific community cannot agree on what this all important number should be.


First, there is absolutely no consensus in the scientific community as to the proper conversion factor. There is no number. Therefore, as there is no scientific agreement, then no number should be used by the Courts. It is a basic Daubert/Frye matter. The government as the proponent of the evidence has the burden to prove it is reliable and based on sound science. The very fact that there are studies that conclude that there is overstatement of plasma to whole blood as low as 1.10 overstatement to as high was 1.59 make it so. That is a 69% swing. Come on!


The conversion factor depends on hematocrit (packed cell volume) entirely (well almost entirely, but for the sake of brevity it is the most important part). Serum or plasma (almost-one article had a statistical artifact) always over estimates BAC. Plasma actually much more so.

PROBLEM 5:

The fifth issue has to do with the specificity. In order for a measuring device to be acceptable it has to measure only what it intends to measure specifically to the exclusion of everything else.

What does that mean?

If you went to Home Depot and bought a tape measure, but when you got it out of the box, it clearly was mislabeled in that it looks like a ruler, but you unspool it and it turns out to have no markings on it, and it turns out to have a thermometer in the middle of the spool.  Boy that is a problem, isn't it?  They are both measuring devices:  one for distance, the other for temperature.  But the crappy tape measure that is really a thermometer is not a specific measuring device as to distance at all.

So here is a fundamental flaw as to hospital blood.  It also is NOT specific to ETOH to the exclusion of all other matters. So, it is not direct and not specific.

Wow!


One of the well know problems is the use of IV administered ringers lactate. Some of our clients were at the hospital due to injury. If so, we would want to look for ringers lactate or any sort of ringers solution application being used OR if there had been any sort of significant trauma as that will release lactate as well.


A little history...Ringer's saline solution was invented by Sydney Ringer, a British physiologist. The solution was further modified by Alexis Hartmann for the purpose of treating acidosis in children. Hartmann modified the solution by adding lactate, which mitigates changes in pH by acting as a buffer for acid. Thus the solution became known as 'Lactated Ringer's Solution' and later, 'Hartmann's solution' Lactated Ringer's Solution is often used for fluid resuscitation after blood loss due to trauma, surgery, or a burn injury. Previously, it was used to induce urine output in patients with renal failure.  Lactated Ringer's Solution is used because the byproducts of lactate metabolism in the liver counteract acidosis, which is a chemical imbalance that occurs with acute fluid loss or renal failure.


The intravenous dose of Lactated Ringer's Solution is usually calculated by estimated fluid loss and presumed fluid deficit. For fluid resuscitation the usual rate of administration is 20 to 30 ml/kg body weight/hour. Lactated Ringer's Solution is not suitable for maintenance therapy because the sodium content (130 mEq/L) is considered too high, particularly for children, whereas the potassium content (4 mEq/L) is too low, in view of electrolyte daily requirement.
 

Why is this so important?

You have to understand that in a trauma situation, they don’t care about the legal ETOH. They care about keeping someone alive and not allowing them to go into shock. So, oftentimes they will put IV’s into each arm and infuse (i.e., squeeze the IV bag really hard and rapidly) to get into the veins as soon as possible. If they take the legal ETOH sample on the same arm, then they have really really large issues. It is an electrolyte replenishment therapy (i.e., fluid resuscitation).  It invites havoc into the BAC determination and process.


The effect of ringers on a hospital blood test has to do with the manner of hospital analysis not the fact that the hospital test is a plasma test. As explained above, hospital analysis is by enzyme assay. An enzyme is added to the plasma sample when it is within the machine. That enzyme (NAD) reacts in the presence of alcohol and forms another enzyme (NADH). The amount of NADH is then measured (relative to the NAD remaining) to really indirectly determine the amount of alcohol in the sample.

So, the problem lies in the contents of the ringers lactate. The lactate reacts with LDH to form pyvurate. During this process additional NAD is converted to NADH, giving a false high alcohol result. In fact, it can give a positive alcohol reading where no alcohol is present. It is just frankly impossible to tell the true endogenous ETOH result.

The machine is totally blind to what is due to Ringer's Lactate and what is due to a person drinking.Stated differently, the machine cannot tell the difference between ETOH created by this process and ETOH actually consumed by the person.  All it sees is more NADH.  Hence, it is not specific.


They can test for lactate levels but they never do.

Ringers lactate is not the only source of lactate, trauma (soft tissue or bone) also releases lactate.  Lactic acid build up on a well-trained athlete can also interfere. Finally, shockingly in and of itself, TCA itself creates lactate! Remember TCA that was added to the sample itself as we described above.

PROBLEM 6:

The final issue has to do with the general scientific and legal communities' view of hospital blood testing. Most of Europe, Asia and Australia abandoned hospital blood testing as a legitimate method of analysis for forensic purposes and bans them entirely from the Courtroom.  This was done many, many years ago.

THERE ARE MORE REASONS

These and many more well-known problems have been well documented in the scientific community for decades.

There are actually a lot more than six (6) reasons why hospital blood is never forensically acceptable including, but not limited to:  (a) the lack of meaningful detailed chain of custody for the tested specimen and all of the accompanying component materials making up the system of the test, (b) the lack of suitable criteria for preventive maintenance, (c) lack of or insufficient schedule of calibration both internal and external, (d) the lack of full documentation of or even the non-use of a third party vendor calibrators and blanks that are either traceable to NIST or USP grade materials, (e) the lack of true meaningful and independent blind proficiency testing of the technologist (the person who runs the sample), (f) the re-use of consumables such as the specimen prep cups and the TCA containers, and yes, even pipette tips without an acceptable Standard Operating Procedure that will insure cleanliness of the items reused, (g) the manufacturer of the machine’s own admonition that the machine is not intended to be used for forensic testing and so on and on and on.

Credit where credit is due….
I would be remiss if I did not commend WellSpan Hospital systems for acknowledging these important issues. I am told that this trend of recognizing the forensic unacceptability of hospital blood testing has continued with several other hospitals also similarly conceding the issue throughout Pennsylvania.  I thank WellSpan for acknowledging and pledging to discontinue the unacceptable forensic practice of hospital blood testing.


So, it begs a question, doesn’t it?

We have been allowing hospital blood testing go on for decades with thousands upon thousands of convictions as a result. Not just here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, but elsewhere in the United States.

Is there anything to be done for those who have been falsely convicted based upon forensically unacceptable science?

We did this with lead bullet analysis, DNA exonerations and other now abandoned quasi-forensic sciences, what will be done?

Or sadly is this yet another example of how there are another set of Rules that apply to DUI cases?

I also need to give a big thank you to the National College for DUI Defense, Inc. where I was exposed to these issues for me to latter develop.  What a great group of scientist-lawyers who live the College's motto:  "Justice Through Knowledge".  Also an equally big thank you to various experts that have helped me through the years in developing my scientific and technical knowledge in this area.  In no particular order they are:  Dr. Joseph Citron, Dr. Thomas Brettell, Dr. Stephen Rose, Dr. Al Staubus, Dr. A. Wayne Jones, Wanda Marley and Janine Arvisu.


In closing, I offer this.  As it seems likely that hospital blood will cease in the MidState in short time.  If any attorney outside of Pennsylvania would like to mount well-developed Frye/Daubert challenges to hospital blood testing as we have done here, I am willing to help you free of charge.  Heck, I will even conduct the cross and directs of the experts if you let me. I will pay my own way to the hearing.  This is how important this issue is to me.  Just contact me.

 You can see my qualifications and experience at avvo.com

You can follow me on Twitter or Facebook or Linkedin.

[A special thank you to Josh D. Lee, Esquire of Oklahoma for helping to edit this work]

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-Justin J. McShane, Esquire, Pennsylvania DUI Attorney

I am the highest rated DUI Attorney in PA as Rated by Avvo.com
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Do the Breath Machines Always Flag Acetone and Diabetics?

It is a national problem to be sure.  It is an endemic and systemic problem.  It is a problem that is pervasive and well-known within the scientific community.  Yet, it is condoned.

In his latest blog post, Bob Keefer, a fellow member of the National College for DUI Defense, Inc and a true trailblazer in the state of  Virginia hits the proverbial nail on the head with his aptly titled "Virginia to Diabetics: We Don’t Care"

In part, he writes:

Research indicates that as many as one in seven drivers are diabetic. This figure includes drivers who may be affected but do not have an official diagnosis. Despite this fact, Virginia’s latest breath tester can’t tell the difference between diabetes and intoxication. Now, diabetics who drive in Virginia are being wrongly convicted of DWI. Worse, it appears that Virginia knew about this problem at the time it ordered the machine… and chose to cover it up.

When Virginia initially requested bids for a new evidentiary breath test device to determine blood alcohol content it correctly required the machine to distinguish among alcohols. This requirement was intended to prevent wrongful convictions. When the manufacturer Virginia wanted to hire admitted that its product could not meet this specification, officials quietly dropped the requirement but nonetheless trained operators, taught judges and represented to prosecutors that the machine performed as specified.

Drinking alcohol is called ethanol. Diabetics naturally produce another type of alcohol – isopropanol – in certain stages of the disease. [McShane's note, this si due to the well known scientific phenomenon of the biotransformation of acetone to isopropanol during ketoacidosis-see AW Jones]. Even though Virginia’s breath tester is only supposed to measure blood alcohol content of ethanol it registers isopropanol on the breath of diabetics. This reading results in false evidence which in turn results in wrongful DWI convictions.

An ancient expression about the measure of a society’s morality is how it treats the sick. Diabetics have enough challenges without the threat of wrongful DWI conviction. Join me in challenging Virginia to cease this shameful practice.

I have written before and will state again...

When will the insanity of breath testing and the fallacy of accuracy, reliability and most importantly the specificity of these machines truly come to light? What will it take?

To rely on infrared spectrometry at wavelengths that are not unique as to ETOH is a sham!

To rely on a machine that no one can be confident of the results because it is not open source and truly vetted technology is a sham!

To rely on antiquated science is a sham!

It is time to use modern technology in a scientifically responsible and acceptable way wherein uncertainty budgets and acknowledged shortcomings are presented to juries and not hidden.

I will continue to answer the trumpet call of Bob Keefer and others to join in the fight to cease that shameful practice here for the benefit of all citizens accused of a Harrisburg DUI, a Carlisle DUI, a Lebanon DUI, a York DUI, a Chambersburg DUI, a Lancaster DUI, a Reading DUI and all Central Pennsylvania DUIs.

Do the Police ALWAYS tell the truth in DUI prosecutions?

Not every police officer lies.  Not every police officer colors the truth.  Not every police officer embellishes.  But there are enough.  If there is one that is too many. 

Let's face it police officers are human.  They are motivated like we all are.  To not lose, to win.  To do the job efficiently and some get lazy if not properly challenged.

 

 

Consider the two most recent controversies.

In his blog post titled "DUI Defense Attorney exposes outrageous memo telling San Diego California DUI prosecution blood draw witnesses how to testify!!" Rick Muller writes of a controversial memo that he uncovered wherein the police are actually coached in writing how to testify in blood cases.

He writes:

In a case San Diego California Drunk Driving Attorney Rick Mueller did, he obtained an amazing internal San Diego California DUI memorandum from a San Diego California DUI blood drawer.

These are the exposed instructions in that SDPD memorandum and potentially given by the San Diego California Police Department to their blood-drawing/laboratory technicians testifying in a San Diego California DUI trial:

"COURT TESTIMONY

You will be asked your name.

You do not have to remember drawing [blood from] the particular defendant. Just say you draw many patients each day you work and it is impossible to remember each one.

You may be asked how you draw the blood. It is the standard procedure you follow for ALL blood draws, EXCEPT that you use a NON-ALCOHOLIC antiseptic wipe (Benzalkolium) to cleanse the phlebotomy site. You ALWAYS follow the same procedure for every blood draw. The blood is drawn into grey top tubes provided by the San Diego Police Department. The tubes contain an anticoagulent (Potassium Oxylate) and a preservative (Sodium Fluoride). You check the tube for the presence of a loose, slightly pink powder before you use it. After you fill the tube with blood, you invert the tube 10 times to mix the blood with the anticoagulent/preservative. You will always mix any tube with an anticoagulent 10 times (you count the inversions). The important things to remember is that you always follow the same procedure, so even though you don't remember this particular individual, you know that you drew the person following our standard procedure.

The suspect is identified by the police officer and, when possible, you check the ID or ask the suspect their name. The police officer completes the label with the suspect's name, DOB, etc. You put your name, date, draw time, and place on the label and place the label on the grey top tube. You then place the grey top tube in the plastic chain-of-custody tube, put the cap on it, and seal it with the sealing tape provided by the SDPD. You then hand it to the officer and he takes charge of it.

"H:\My Documents\San Diego Police Dept\Forensic Staff\Court Testimony.doc"

These instructions on what to say in a San Diego California DUI trial are given to law enforcement witnesses testifying under oath in a San Diego California county court of law and at the San Diego California Department of Motor Vehicles.

San Diego California DUI blood or San Diego California DUI laboratory technicians are essentially told how to testify and what to say, not as to what they actually did -and not what they know - in an actual San Diego California DUI / drunk driving case.

This is simply outrageous.  The memo basically says ignore your oath to tell the truth, here is what you are to say regardless of what you actually remember or what you actually did.

 

But is this isolated to California?

No.  Consider this from  "1,200 DWI convictions in Texas to be set aside".

More than 1,200 driving while intoxicated convictions in Harris County are invalid after a contractor was convicted of faking inspections of alcohol breath testing devices, prosecutors said.

Deetrice Wallace, a Department of Public Safety contractor, told investigators that she had falsified inspections records for the South Houston and Clute police department intoxilyzers.

Buess said Wallace manipulated the machines instead of changing the reference sample every month, and pocketed $146,000.

From 2002 until she was arrested in October 2008, Wallace handled DPS instruments that were used to determine alcohol concentration in DWI cases for at least seven police departments, including League City, Friendswood, Webster, Seabrook, Galveston, Clute and South Houston.

Buess said Wallace signed off on about 4,000 test slips. Of those, some did not result in convictions and others were not in Harris County. Buess did not know how other counties would address the problem. The prosecutor was not optimistic about seeking 1,200 convictions again because the office will not have test results, and other evidence has been destroyed, including videotapes.

DPS officials invalidated all breath tests recorded by intoxilyzers under Wallace's supervision because they could not pinpoint the date when her unethical behavior began.

Once contacted, the attorney of record will contact the defendant and determine if they want to try the case again. If the defendant wants a new trial, the district attorney's office will agree to it.

The case will then start over in the court where the conviction was obtained.

Buess said some defendants who were convicted of two DWIs and a felony DWI may get a clean slate after the dust clears. She said one defendant who will be able to get a new trial was sentenced to 60 years in prison for a felony DWI.

"It's just a massive problem that is not going to go away," Buess said. "It's a huge mess."

 

Could this be happening with DUIs in Harrisburg, Carlisle, Lebanon, York, Mechanicsburg, Camp Hill, Hershey, Jonestown, Chambersburg or  in other places in Pennsylvania?

Is there anyone, besides me, who is bothered by the fact that every single police report recounts "an odor of alcohol, bloodshot, glassy eyes and slurred speech"?  It is all garbage.

There is only one way to expose it.  Continue to challenge the prosecution's case.  Demand there be verified and actual proof based on truth.

As long as there are human beings, there will be temptation to cut corners, to do things wrong, and even to outright falsify.  We will stand in opposition to this.  Will you?

Minnesota and Chuck Ramsay lead the way

In my considered and educated opinion, Minnesota has a lot of true cutting edge litigation when it comes to DUI.  There are a lot of great attorneys who really champion the cause of the citizen accused and try all they can to push out of court the "junk" science and into Court only validated, true science.  One of the premier attorneys in this uphill struggle is Chuck Ramsay.  He has a fascinating DUI blog that I regularly read that outlines in a completely transparent manner exactly what he and his colleagues in Minnesota are doing.  I would highly recommend subscribing to the RSS feed to it.  It is called Minnesota DWI Defense Blog.

Recently he has been writing on Source Code and the honest to goodness struggle that DUI defense practitioners have to go through to be granted access to understanding why the breath machine does what it does.  The blog posts read like the modern day version of the Book of Job from the Bible.  In the latest update, he writes:

As of October 16th, 98 Private Attorneys have each donated $1,000 to MSCJ’s source code review process. All of this is in addition to the tens of thousands the MSCJ membership has already expended leading the defense bar on this issue and the tens of thousands more it intends to commit as well.

Each and every one of those attorneys are to be commended.  I openly wonder what if this great and worthwhile battle had to be waged here in Pennsylvania and if so, would my colleagues be so dedicated?

I know I would be.

Good job to Minnesota.

Are the increasing number of DUI arrests due to better training or different priorities? It's all in the numbers.

In today's Patriot News, reporter Kira L. Schlechte penned a very well-written fact intensive article entitled "Troopers' DUI push hits area hardest: The state police have made more arrests in this region than anywhere else. An advocate credits their training and dedication."  I would highly encourage anyone to read it.

The thrust of the story is that in Central Pennsylvania there have been more DUI arrests than even Philadelphia or Pittsburgh.  She writes,

"Troop H -- which handles Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Perry and York counties -- has made the most arrests, with 269."

Rather than simply concluding that there must be a massive DUI problem in Central Pennsylvania, the author takes the time to drill down to the facts.  To compare proverbial apples to apples and oranges to oranges.

She points out that Troop H is the largest in terms of geography (3,824 square miles) and has the most amount of Troopers stationed (406).  The author also took the time to note that the Pennsylvania State Police in central Pennsylvania are general patrol duty officers by and large where they are the only police force in the rural areas.  This is called "rural response" as opposed to the way that Troopers are used in the larger urban areas where they either do not exist in large numbers or have more specialized units such as drug interdiction.

Where some in the article point to increased specialized training leading to an increase in the numbers, this information is at best speculative.  Central Pennsylvania does not have a flock of highly trained DRE officers as some might contend.  In fact, most do not have anything more than very basic academy training without the NHTSA recommended once every two years refresher updates. 

How do I know?  I have hundreds of transcripts where I have asked Troopers about their certifications and qualifications while under oath.  Some were trained so long ago that under oath they say they cannot even recognize the cover let alone the content of their text books used to teach them the SFSTs.  We keep a database in the office to cross-reference every officer's or Trooper's claims of training over a period of time.   

I think the author is right.  It might be more to do with the numbers as indicated in the article's thrust and/or perhaps the focus of priorities, rather than necessarily the training.  Good old fashioned honest reporting.  Thank you for it.