{"id":7319,"date":"2023-12-06T12:44:59","date_gmt":"2023-12-06T17:44:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.randalawyers.com\/?p=7319"},"modified":"2024-06-04T13:06:55","modified_gmt":"2024-06-04T17:06:55","slug":"how-to-make-your-first-offense-dui-in-michigan-your-last","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.randalawyers.com\/blog\/how-to-make-your-first-offense-dui-in-michigan-your-last\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Make Your First Offense DUI in Michigan Your Last"},"content":{"rendered":"

Everyone facing a 1st offense DUI charge<\/a> certainly intends for it to be their last. There has probably never been anyone in the history of the world who has thought differently. However, and as the old saying goes, the road to Hell is paved with good intentions.<\/p>\n

The reader can be sure that every person who has ever had a 2nd offense or 3rd offense DUI (the actual legal term in Michigan is Operating While Intoxicated<\/a>, or “OWI” for short) had sworn, each time prior, that they would never get caught driving drunk again.<\/p>\n

That simple promise may work for some people, but not for everyone. Before anyone blows this off, let me explain\u2026<\/p>\n

A 1st offense DUI charge should also be your last drinking and driving offenseIn our roles as Michigan DUI lawyers<\/a>, we actively try to help our clients to make sure that their first DUI is, in fact, their last. This involves more than just trying to scare someone by rattling off how much worse a 2nd offense is over a 1st offense DUI charge.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s understandable that everyone\u2019s first concerns are things like staying out of jail, protecting their record, and not losing the ability to drive. Fortunately, that\u2019s usually easy for us to accomplish in 1st offense cases.<\/p>\n

Many people are so relieved when they avoid those things that they have little interest in thinking about any kind of \u201cnext time,\u201d because they\u2019re convinced there won\u2019t be<\/em> a next time. To be sure, for the vast majority of people, a 1st offense DUI charge WILL be their last.<\/p>\n

However, anytime a person finds him or herself in criminal legal trouble, it\u2019s important to examine the whole situation honestly, and with an open mind, to see how he or she got there.<\/p>\n

In the context of a 1st offense DUI charge, that means we need to look at the drinking behavior that led to the whole incident. This is NOT to suggest that a person has a drinking problem. Instead, we need to look back at all the circumstances surrounding a 1st offense DUI situation. The court is ABSOLUTELY going to do just that.<\/p>\n

As the old saying goes, \u201cforewarned is forearmed.\u201d To protect our client, we have to examine all of this, both in the context of the existing DUI case, and with an eye toward the future.<\/p>\n

Let\u2019s use a hypothetical to explain:<\/p>\n

Imagine that Tipsy Tom, going through his 1st offense DUI charge (the proper legal term in Michigan is Operating While Intoxicated, or \u201cOWI\u201d for short), is sitting for the legally required interview with the probation officer (more on that later) and explaining what happened of the night of his DUI arrest:<\/p>\n

\u201cWell, I play softball [or bowl, or play hockey, or whatever] in a league on Wednesdays, and we usually go out for a few beers after. This time, I guess I overdid it. I thought I was okay to drive, but\u2026.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Wow! Tom just used a steam shovel to dig himself into a really deep hole.<\/p>\n

This will make sense when we compare what Tom just said to a very different explanation given by another hypothetical character, Tippling Tina:<\/p>\n

\u201cI\u2019m pretty much a homebody, and I don\u2019t really drink that often, maybe like a glass of wine a few times a year, at most. This time, though, one of my high school friends was visiting here in Michigan, and she got a few of our other old friends together for a night out, so I kind of felt obligated to go. These girls are much better at drinking than I am, but I guess I just got caught up.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

At one point, I told myself to stop drinking, but they just kept buying rounds and I basically got lost in the moment. By the time we left, I just wanted to make it home, and thought I could do that without getting caught.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

One of the most obvious differences between Tom and Tina is that Tom regularly hangs out with fellow drinkers.<\/p>\n

Tina, by contrast, does not. In other words, spending an evening drinking is normal for Tom, but out-of-character for her.<\/p>\n

Right off the bat, and in the context of their DUI cases, those differences are going to be a burden for Tom, and a benefit for Tina. It is standard in every court for a person to be ordered, as a condition of bond \u2013 while his or her case is pending \u2013 to NOT drink alcohol.<\/p>\n

It is also a standard condition of probation for every DUI offense that a person refrain from consuming alcohol and stay out of bars.<\/p>\n

Consequently, Tom is going to have to adjust his social life, and not \u201cgo out for a few beers\u201d with the boys after game-day, whereas Tina won\u2019t have to do anything other than what she normally does \u2013 stay home. That much is pretty obvious.<\/p>\n

Beyond that, however, there is are some real questions:<\/p>\n