Michigan DUI – How Long Will it Stay on my Record?

Under Michigan Law, as revised a few years ago, any combination of 3 alcohol-related Traffic Offenses within a person’s lifetime can result in a Felony charge. This changed the old law, which held that a person need to have 3 alcohol-related Traffic Offenses within 10 years in order for that 3rd Offense to be charged as a Felony. This means a person who had a DUI 32 years ago, and then another 27 years ago, and who is now charged with an alcohol-related Traffic Offense (usually OWI) can be charged with a Felony.
The State reasons, and you really can’t disagree, that if DUI’s could be expunged, a person could avoid being charged with a 2nd or even 3d (Felony) Offense until they picked up their 3rd or 4th charge, respectively. It’s a kind of Free Pass for DUI’s that no politician is ever likely to back.
That said, I agree with those who point out that it seems rather unfair that a person can come back to Court 5 years after they’re convicted of a very serious crime, like Delivery of Heroin, or Aggravated Assault, or Home Invasion, or even a whole host of Sex Crimes, and have it taken off their Record, while a person who got caught, on one occasion in their lives, after having had a few too many drinks, and is otherwise a hard-working, tax-paying and law-abiding member of society, is left without a remedy. That doesn’t seem right.
But, as the saying goes, it is what it is. I wouldn’t hold out much hope that DUI’s will someday be “Expungable.”
If there’s any good news here, it’s that most people will survive a DUI without much, if any, damage. Except for those who hold a CDL Endorsement, a 1st Offense DUI is not the end of the world. Contrary to the way things might feel at the moment a person is facing such a charge, it will not ruin their life.
But it will not go away, either. In that sense, getting a DUI is more like being branded as opposed to tattooed. There is no way to erase it.

Written By Jeffrey Randa
Jeff has been a practicing Michigan criminal lawyer, DUI attorney and driver’s license restoration lawyer for more than 30 years. He is passionate about winning and doing everything required to accomplish that. He understands that a pending criminal or DUI charge is stressful and that being unable to legally drive is a huge problem. He firmly believes that a lawyer’s job is to fix and make things better for the client.
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