Researchers say a breathalyzer has flaws, casting doubt on countless convictions(zdnet.com)
zdnet.com
Researchers say a breathalyzer has flaws, casting doubt on countless convictions
https://www.zdnet.com/article/draeger-breathalyzer-breath-test-convictions/
143 comments
It doesn't look like this is an error that will cause a totally sober person to fail a breathalyzer test. If you're worried about the accuracy of the machine, you can also submit to a blood test: https://duilawyerlosangeles.com/dui-lawyer-advice-breathalyz...
This is one issue where I'm firmly on the side of the police until there's evidence that faulty breathalyzers are putting totally innocent people in jail. If you choose to get into the driver's seat of a car, you should not be anywhere near the legal BAC limit. By the time an officer asks you to submit to a BAC test, they've already observed enough behavior to make them believe that you may be a danger to others.
Plan ahead so that you don't have to worry about leaving your car somewhere. Call an Uber or a Lyft. Get a friend to drive you home. Moderate your drinking. Take some time, go for a long walk. On popular holidays in many places, you can even call AAA for a free ride home, even if you're not a member.
Just please don't drive home on the hope that a defense lawyer can argue on your behalf that breathalyzers aren't reliable.
This is one issue where I'm firmly on the side of the police until there's evidence that faulty breathalyzers are putting totally innocent people in jail. If you choose to get into the driver's seat of a car, you should not be anywhere near the legal BAC limit. By the time an officer asks you to submit to a BAC test, they've already observed enough behavior to make them believe that you may be a danger to others.
Plan ahead so that you don't have to worry about leaving your car somewhere. Call an Uber or a Lyft. Get a friend to drive you home. Moderate your drinking. Take some time, go for a long walk. On popular holidays in many places, you can even call AAA for a free ride home, even if you're not a member.
Just please don't drive home on the hope that a defense lawyer can argue on your behalf that breathalyzers aren't reliable.
As a lawyer, I support your personal advice that no one should be anywhere near the legal limit while behind the wheel. I advocate for 0 drinks before driving.
That said I want to correct a few things:
1. In many jurisdictions, including mine, you do not have the option to submit to a blood test. If the police demand a breath test, and you refuse, you will be charged for failure to blow, the penalty for which is, in many cases, the same as being charged with drunk driving. You can't say to the police "can't I just get a blood test instead" to get out of this failure to blow charge.
2. The intoxylizer breath testing devices are heavily guarded, the government and the company that makes them have refused to release the source code or the machines themselves for testing. The one time the court did order the source code to be turned over the company claimed they lost it.
https://tampaduiattorney.wordpress.com/2011/07/26/cmi-lost-t...
Under such circumstances, it is unrealistic to think that real objective and meaningful tests will be done to establish the validity of these machines.
3. I'm not the one telling people that there is a legal limit and they should be below it. I'm telling people not to drink at all. It's the government that made up this stupidity about legal limits and it seems to be the least we can ask for as citizens for the government to stick to the very stupid and ill devised rules they come up with.
If you don't want people to be anywhere near the legal limit when driving then make that the rule and tell them that. Don't make up this mumbo jumbo about legal limits and pretend you have the ability to test for it when you don't because that'll lead many people to inadvertently break the law.
That said I want to correct a few things:
1. In many jurisdictions, including mine, you do not have the option to submit to a blood test. If the police demand a breath test, and you refuse, you will be charged for failure to blow, the penalty for which is, in many cases, the same as being charged with drunk driving. You can't say to the police "can't I just get a blood test instead" to get out of this failure to blow charge.
2. The intoxylizer breath testing devices are heavily guarded, the government and the company that makes them have refused to release the source code or the machines themselves for testing. The one time the court did order the source code to be turned over the company claimed they lost it.
https://tampaduiattorney.wordpress.com/2011/07/26/cmi-lost-t...
Under such circumstances, it is unrealistic to think that real objective and meaningful tests will be done to establish the validity of these machines.
3. I'm not the one telling people that there is a legal limit and they should be below it. I'm telling people not to drink at all. It's the government that made up this stupidity about legal limits and it seems to be the least we can ask for as citizens for the government to stick to the very stupid and ill devised rules they come up with.
If you don't want people to be anywhere near the legal limit when driving then make that the rule and tell them that. Don't make up this mumbo jumbo about legal limits and pretend you have the ability to test for it when you don't because that'll lead many people to inadvertently break the law.
FYI for other readers, in CO and MI, the limit is 0.05. Be careful out there.
> If the police demand a breath test, and you refuse, you will be charged for failure to blow, the penalty for which is, in many cases, the same as being charged with drunk driving.
Question for a lawyer then: How does this affect international travel. I know that you can't go to Canada if you have a DUI on your record, and other countries can be even more scrutinious. Is a Failure to Blow considered the same as a DUI to countries like those?
> If the police demand a breath test, and you refuse, you will be charged for failure to blow, the penalty for which is, in many cases, the same as being charged with drunk driving.
Question for a lawyer then: How does this affect international travel. I know that you can't go to Canada if you have a DUI on your record, and other countries can be even more scrutinious. Is a Failure to Blow considered the same as a DUI to countries like those?
Exactly, there is quite a bit of news stories every year about "here is how many drinks a person of this height and weight can have before being .08" or whatever.
Just don't drink and drive, that's the only sure fire way to not get accused. Especially for a limit you can't test yourself without spending ~$100USD to get a personal tester which they don't guarantee the accuracy of.
We're trying to enforce laws on an uneven playing ground (a limit the average citizen can't test against until it's too late).
Just don't drink and drive, that's the only sure fire way to not get accused. Especially for a limit you can't test yourself without spending ~$100USD to get a personal tester which they don't guarantee the accuracy of.
We're trying to enforce laws on an uneven playing ground (a limit the average citizen can't test against until it's too late).
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> It's the government that made up this stupidity about legal limits
Breaking the legal limit is usually sufficient but not required for DUI; DUI laws existed before legal limits and addressed being under the influence. Legal limits were added on top of the base rule to create a bright line where there would be clarity of guilt, but AFAIK in most places they did not replace the base rule, just added on top of it.
Breaking the legal limit is usually sufficient but not required for DUI; DUI laws existed before legal limits and addressed being under the influence. Legal limits were added on top of the base rule to create a bright line where there would be clarity of guilt, but AFAIK in most places they did not replace the base rule, just added on top of it.
That's excellent advice for personal behavior. However, the justice system should enforce the law as it stands, as accurately as reasonably possible. If the legal limit is too high, we should fix that in the legislature, not use faulty equipment to punish people who didn't break the law; someone who's a bit under the legal limit is in fact "totally innocent" according to the law.
I once was given a BAC after being stopped for a faulty tail light on a Saturday night. I'd had a single glass of wine two hours before, and at that point was completely sober, wide awake, and paying attention to my driving. The officer didn't mention any other reason for stopping me, and seemed disappointed when my BAC test was clear.
I once was given a BAC after being stopped for a faulty tail light on a Saturday night. I'd had a single glass of wine two hours before, and at that point was completely sober, wide awake, and paying attention to my driving. The officer didn't mention any other reason for stopping me, and seemed disappointed when my BAC test was clear.
> The officer didn't mention any other reason for stopping me, and seemed disappointed when my BAC test was clear.
This is way more common than it should be. Dash cams have finally helped this situation somewhat, but when I used to work late in college I got pulled over way more than I should have for BS reasons. "You touched the white line", "Nope". "You were swerving", "No again".
Finally a judge started throwing out all DUI cases without a dash cam and the police who dragged their feet for years after being mandated to install dash cams suddenly got it done.
No one should ever be driving after drinking, but the police also need to follow the law.
This is way more common than it should be. Dash cams have finally helped this situation somewhat, but when I used to work late in college I got pulled over way more than I should have for BS reasons. "You touched the white line", "Nope". "You were swerving", "No again".
Finally a judge started throwing out all DUI cases without a dash cam and the police who dragged their feet for years after being mandated to install dash cams suddenly got it done.
No one should ever be driving after drinking, but the police also need to follow the law.
I had a similar experience. Went out, had a single drink over about a three hour period, drove home, got pulled over for speeding. I think given the time of evening they just assumed I had been drinking. They gave me a BAC and officer also seemed disappointed it was clear. If I had had more than two or three drinks over the same period of time (which would have made me still well under legal limit), I may have requested a blood test out of an abundance of caution and to not rely on a possibly-inaccurate BAC to determine the (I’m told) very expensive consequences of getting a DUI.
> By the time an officer asks you to submit to a BAC test, they've already observed enough behavior to make them believe that you may be a danger to others.
That's the goal, but cops also sometimes just like to exercise their power and arrest people who don't show signs of impairment. Or use that as an excuse to search the car and try to find a speck of weed. I certainly don't trust an officer to accurately gauge something so nebulous. Hopefully in a few decades we'll all be in self driving vehicles and DUI will be a thing of the past.
That's the goal, but cops also sometimes just like to exercise their power and arrest people who don't show signs of impairment. Or use that as an excuse to search the car and try to find a speck of weed. I certainly don't trust an officer to accurately gauge something so nebulous. Hopefully in a few decades we'll all be in self driving vehicles and DUI will be a thing of the past.
When someone blows a 0.08 when it really is a 0.07, that would be putting an innocent person in jail.
Don't you have the right to ask for blood tests where you live?
Getting a blood test means either going to the police station, or letting a cop stick a needle in you on the side of the road. We should do whatever we can do avoid making innocent people do either one.
> Getting a blood test means either going to the police station, or letting a cop stick a needle in you on the side of the road.
You have to go to the station anyway, the Portable BAC they use roadside is inadmissible in court, they give you a more accurate test at the station if you fail roadside. Having a nurse available to take a blood sample instead shouldn't be unreasonable.
You have to go to the station anyway, the Portable BAC they use roadside is inadmissible in court, they give you a more accurate test at the station if you fail roadside. Having a nurse available to take a blood sample instead shouldn't be unreasonable.
I agree with you, but the OP comment was that you would end up in jail, I think here in Romania if you are caught you will have to submit to blood tests so it is determined precisely your alcohol level in blood, depending on the level you may escape free since you are allowed to have a small level.
In PA, if you try that, you will have to pay a minimum fine of $500 and have your license suspended for a minimum of 1 year, even if the blood tests show no intoxication. If you have no previous DUI convictions, theses penalties may be worse than being found inaccurately to be over the limit.
I don't know, but I don't like needles, so I probably wouldn't. That's not really the point though.
If someone stops drinking, then gets in a car, then an hour later blows a 0.07 they were probably over when they started driving.
Ignoring for a moment the issue with “probably”, this is also just not true. If you stop drinking and immediately get in a car to drive, your BAC is increasing while you are driving for some time. It’s entirely possible that your BAC is higher an hour after you stop drinking than immediately after, depending on how much you drank and how quickly.
Innocent until proven guilty. Please don't pollute our legal system with "probably".
In case it wasn't clear from my comment, I'm less willing to argue for the innocence of a person who was at .07, or .075, or .0799, because of the potentially serious consequences of their decisions and the number of convenient alternatives they had available.
That's my personal position on this. It's consistent with my own moral framework. I get that there's a valid counterargument from a position of law-and-order morality.
But I've also had friends who were first responders to a horrifying drunk driver collision. Trying to keep innocent people from bleeding out on the side of the road messes you up for a while. It's not a victimless crime.
You can get from .08 to .06 by walking around for an hour. If you think you might be close enough to borderline, go take a walk.
That's my personal position on this. It's consistent with my own moral framework. I get that there's a valid counterargument from a position of law-and-order morality.
But I've also had friends who were first responders to a horrifying drunk driver collision. Trying to keep innocent people from bleeding out on the side of the road messes you up for a while. It's not a victimless crime.
You can get from .08 to .06 by walking around for an hour. If you think you might be close enough to borderline, go take a walk.
We are in a state of law. you cannot argue that a person is innocent but "not innocent enough" because they came too close to the fixed limit. A person is over it and guilty or under it and innocent.
As said above, if you think this limit is too high, fight to have it lowered but please don't blur the lines of the law based on your personal convictions.
As said above, if you think this limit is too high, fight to have it lowered but please don't blur the lines of the law based on your personal convictions.
> In case it wasn't clear from my comment, I'm less willing to argue for the innocence of a person who was at .07, or .075, or .0799, because of the potentially serious consequences of their decisions and the number of convenient alternatives they had available.
Do you feel the same way about getting ticketed for Speeding when going 55mph in a 55mph zone? Going 56mph is technically speeding you know and 55mph is very close to 56 mpg. 55mph and 56mph are arguably equivalently dangerous.
A limit is a limit. It's a discrete, unchanging, unambiguous, line in the sand that once crossed warrants consequences. That's why we codify these things into laws.
Do you feel the same way about getting ticketed for Speeding when going 55mph in a 55mph zone? Going 56mph is technically speeding you know and 55mph is very close to 56 mpg. 55mph and 56mph are arguably equivalently dangerous.
A limit is a limit. It's a discrete, unchanging, unambiguous, line in the sand that once crossed warrants consequences. That's why we codify these things into laws.
Your moral framework and personal position is not what should be used to determine guilt.
One issue is that some places set a very low standard, one lower than evidence shows to effect driving ability. Being borderline with unnecessarily low limits means the person is not impaired.
One issue is that some places set a very low standard, one lower than evidence shows to effect driving ability. Being borderline with unnecessarily low limits means the person is not impaired.
> You can get from .08 to .06 by walking around for an hour. If you think you might be close enough to borderline, go take a walk.
This isn't what the science says, and you can't "think you might be close enough to borderline" because you don't have an internal BAC meter. All in all this is extremely bad advice.
This isn't what the science says, and you can't "think you might be close enough to borderline" because you don't have an internal BAC meter. All in all this is extremely bad advice.
> This isn't what the science says
Umm yeah - science and personal experience say it really is. Do you have a source for your claim?
Umm yeah - science and personal experience say it really is. Do you have a source for your claim?
Science says that when you start walking, your body stops absorbing alcohol from your digestive tract?
What if that walk takes you from .6 to .8? Oops.
What if that walk takes you from .6 to .8? Oops.
Citation please? That's not supported by any of the studies I've read or personal experience with BAC testing. In fact, pretty much everything points to walking having no affect on alcohol metabolism at all, so what you've done is spent an additional hour metabolising the alcohol, and lowering your BAC.
https://mcwell.nd.edu/your-well-being/physical-well-being/al...
"A person who has not eaten will hit a peak BAC typically between 1/2 hour to two hours of drinking. A person who has eaten will hit a peak BAC typically between 1 and 6 hours, depending on the amount of alcohol consumed."
Walking does nothing, but giving the alcohol more time to absorb can take you from safe to unsafe.
"A person who has not eaten will hit a peak BAC typically between 1/2 hour to two hours of drinking. A person who has eaten will hit a peak BAC typically between 1 and 6 hours, depending on the amount of alcohol consumed."
Walking does nothing, but giving the alcohol more time to absorb can take you from safe to unsafe.
If you got into the drivers seat at 0.07 you are doing something wrong.
Unless breathalysers detect alcohol when none exists, then I think knowing they are "10% eitherway" is a good caution.
Unless breathalysers detect alcohol when none exists, then I think knowing they are "10% eitherway" is a good caution.
How can you justify this from a legal standpoint? Personal ethics be damned, we've established that 0.08 is the line. 0.07 is not above or equal to that. You can't say someone is in the wrong because they are close, but not on the other side, of something binary.
> Personal ethics be damned, we've established that 0.08 is the line. 0.07 is not above or equal to that.
Quite a few of the laws aren't written that way.
A 0.08 is dead to rights guilty--generally a DWI--driving while intoxicated.
However you very much can be convicted of DUI--driving under the influence--even if you blow significantly less than 0.08. This is especially true if the police also have you on video doing something stupid or speeding excessively.
Quite a few of the laws aren't written that way.
A 0.08 is dead to rights guilty--generally a DWI--driving while intoxicated.
However you very much can be convicted of DUI--driving under the influence--even if you blow significantly less than 0.08. This is especially true if the police also have you on video doing something stupid or speeding excessively.
Can I ask you (and anyone still reading) where they live and how important a car is to getting to, say, the nearest bar?
I am trying to understand if this is an economic / urban / rural question or is really about a bright line between legal and illegal
I am trying to understand if this is an economic / urban / rural question or is really about a bright line between legal and illegal
From a legal standpoint, its 0.08 within the ability to accurately measure BAC. I promise every machine has a margin of error and that is accepted.
if you're within the margin of error for measuring equipment that's just part of life. Applies to radar guns, applies to breathalyzers, and every other technical solution to a legal issue.
if you're within the margin of error for measuring equipment that's just part of life. Applies to radar guns, applies to breathalyzers, and every other technical solution to a legal issue.
If the margin of error for a particular device were 0.07, that would seem less acceptable as just part of life?
If the law says someone must be at 0.08 or above, and the machine margin of error is 0.01, then the machine should have to read 0.09 before someone is penalized.
the jury gets to know the the value, and the error, and weight it accordingly, along with the rest of the evidence.
also the acceptable error on the GC/FID testing used for blood alcohol is 3-5%, depending on lab, etc. so that's 0.004. if you managed to get the cop's attention at 0.083, and you're drunk enough they bother to arrest you, instead of trying to find someone drunker to spend 2 hours arresting, the DA is still probably going to offer DWAI or less for your 0.083 unless you've got a long history of drunk driving.
also the acceptable error on the GC/FID testing used for blood alcohol is 3-5%, depending on lab, etc. so that's 0.004. if you managed to get the cop's attention at 0.083, and you're drunk enough they bother to arrest you, instead of trying to find someone drunker to spend 2 hours arresting, the DA is still probably going to offer DWAI or less for your 0.083 unless you've got a long history of drunk driving.
Then shouldn’t the margin of error tolerance of the machine be part of the law as well?
What's happening in this thread right now is simply a difference of moral frameworks.
On one side, you have people for whom right and wrong is defined by the law: if it's legal, then it's right, and if it's illegal, it's wrong. Therefore as long as people are making decisions that are consistent with law, they are fine.
On the other side, you have people for whom right and wrong is a fuzzier judgement of consequences somewhat independent of the law. If it's dangerous but legal, it's still dangerous. If it's illegal and not dangerous, then maybe it shouldn't be enforced by law.
It's sadly unlikely that either side is going to find any agreement with the other.
I'm firmly in the second camp on this particular issue: I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay; if you're close enough to .08 that a marginal error in a device could make it illegal, then I wish you weren't driving. Hell, if I'm out, I'll give just about anyone a free ride home, and take them back to their car in the morning, if that's what it takes to keep them from driving "a little bit" drunk.
On one side, you have people for whom right and wrong is defined by the law: if it's legal, then it's right, and if it's illegal, it's wrong. Therefore as long as people are making decisions that are consistent with law, they are fine.
On the other side, you have people for whom right and wrong is a fuzzier judgement of consequences somewhat independent of the law. If it's dangerous but legal, it's still dangerous. If it's illegal and not dangerous, then maybe it shouldn't be enforced by law.
It's sadly unlikely that either side is going to find any agreement with the other.
I'm firmly in the second camp on this particular issue: I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay; if you're close enough to .08 that a marginal error in a device could make it illegal, then I wish you weren't driving. Hell, if I'm out, I'll give just about anyone a free ride home, and take them back to their car in the morning, if that's what it takes to keep them from driving "a little bit" drunk.
> What's happening in this thread right now is simply a difference of moral frameworks.
That’s not what’s happening at all. No one here is asserting that .08 is some moral boundary. What’s happening is that some people here think that people convicted of criminal acts should be guilty of those acts as defined in the law. Other people think that pretty close is enough to declare someone guilty of a crime.
.08 is the legal boundary. If you’re driving at .07, you have not broken the law.
> I'm firmly in the second camp on this particular issue: I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay; if you're close enough to .08 that a marginal error in a device could make it illegal, then I wish you weren't driving.
That’s lovely but “I wish you weren’t driving” is not the law.
That’s not what’s happening at all. No one here is asserting that .08 is some moral boundary. What’s happening is that some people here think that people convicted of criminal acts should be guilty of those acts as defined in the law. Other people think that pretty close is enough to declare someone guilty of a crime.
.08 is the legal boundary. If you’re driving at .07, you have not broken the law.
> I'm firmly in the second camp on this particular issue: I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay; if you're close enough to .08 that a marginal error in a device could make it illegal, then I wish you weren't driving.
That’s lovely but “I wish you weren’t driving” is not the law.
> .08 is the legal boundary.
Usually, it's the boundary between “defintiely DUI [or DWI, where these are distinguished] by BAC” and “quite probably DUI by being under the influence, for which BAC may be supporting evidence”.
> If you’re driving at .07, you have not broken the law.
That's inaccurate.
Usually, it's the boundary between “defintiely DUI [or DWI, where these are distinguished] by BAC” and “quite probably DUI by being under the influence, for which BAC may be supporting evidence”.
> If you’re driving at .07, you have not broken the law.
That's inaccurate.
> Usually, it's the boundary between “defintiely DUI [or DWI, where these are distinguished] by BAC” and “quite probably DUI by being under the influence, for which BAC may be supporting evidence”.
0.08 is the legal boundary for per se influence of alcohol. If you aren’t at 0.08, you must be provably impaired by alcohol which is a different legal test. (0.07 could be supporting evidence, but so could the fact that you were at a bar, even if a BAC test was never administered.)
To my understanding, very few DUIs are prosecuted for alcohol DUI with BAC below .08. Even fewer are prosecuted successfully. The BAC of .08 is enshrined in law as the point of “intoxication”, making it difficult to prove the “influence” of alcohol below that level.
> That's inaccurate.
It’s exactly as accurate as saying you have not broken the law driving at 0.01. You might be guilty of DUI at any BAC theoretically, if you demonstrate impairment.
0.08 is the legal boundary for per se influence of alcohol. If you aren’t at 0.08, you must be provably impaired by alcohol which is a different legal test. (0.07 could be supporting evidence, but so could the fact that you were at a bar, even if a BAC test was never administered.)
To my understanding, very few DUIs are prosecuted for alcohol DUI with BAC below .08. Even fewer are prosecuted successfully. The BAC of .08 is enshrined in law as the point of “intoxication”, making it difficult to prove the “influence” of alcohol below that level.
> That's inaccurate.
It’s exactly as accurate as saying you have not broken the law driving at 0.01. You might be guilty of DUI at any BAC theoretically, if you demonstrate impairment.
I would not argue that right and wrong are defined by the law. What I am saying is that the law is defined by the law. We don't punish people for immoral behavior, only for breaking the law.
This is the only fair and democratic way to handle things. The law is defined by a legislature which (in theory at least) is responsive to public opinion on what should be considered acceptable behavior.
This does not mean the law is always correct about what's moral. There are many legal behaviors that I think are immoral, and many illegal behaviors that I think are morally fine. But if we put people in jail for doing things that somebody thinks is immoral, without going through the democratic process to make that actually illegal, then the rights that people have in a democracy are being infringed.
This is the only fair and democratic way to handle things. The law is defined by a legislature which (in theory at least) is responsive to public opinion on what should be considered acceptable behavior.
This does not mean the law is always correct about what's moral. There are many legal behaviors that I think are immoral, and many illegal behaviors that I think are morally fine. But if we put people in jail for doing things that somebody thinks is immoral, without going through the democratic process to make that actually illegal, then the rights that people have in a democracy are being infringed.
> I'm firmly in the second camp on this particular issue: I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay; if you're close enough to .08 that a marginal error in a device could make it illegal, then I wish you weren't driving.
Then you should be advocating for a lowering of the limit. If by your judgement anyone who blows a .07 is above the limit, than the limit becomes .07.
Here is why I think your logic is broken; If we lower it to .07, I assume you call anyone at .06 guilty, no? It is "close enough". So if we lower it to .06, you'd call .05 guilty, rinse and repeat.
I am totally for lowering the limit to whatever we find most safe. Yet, the law needs to be set and followed. Fuzzy laws ruin lives.
Then you should be advocating for a lowering of the limit. If by your judgement anyone who blows a .07 is above the limit, than the limit becomes .07.
Here is why I think your logic is broken; If we lower it to .07, I assume you call anyone at .06 guilty, no? It is "close enough". So if we lower it to .06, you'd call .05 guilty, rinse and repeat.
I am totally for lowering the limit to whatever we find most safe. Yet, the law needs to be set and followed. Fuzzy laws ruin lives.
quit arguing slippery slope fallacies.
It's perfectly reasonable to say you want 0.08, but you are willing to accept the margin of error as well.
It's perfectly reasonable to say you want 0.08, but you are willing to accept the margin of error as well.
It's not 0.08 then. It's 0.09 (or w/e your margin is). Why is this such a debated topic?
Literally, I do not even get what you're arguing. The person I was replying to was fundamentally different than a margin of error, so first off this is already totally sideways. But fine, if you want to talk margin of error, lets do that. I don't get what your point is. A 0.09 because it's 0.08+0.01 is just 0.09. You get a ticket if your past the margin of error.
Are you saying something different? What the hell is going on lol.
Literally, I do not even get what you're arguing. The person I was replying to was fundamentally different than a margin of error, so first off this is already totally sideways. But fine, if you want to talk margin of error, lets do that. I don't get what your point is. A 0.09 because it's 0.08+0.01 is just 0.09. You get a ticket if your past the margin of error.
Are you saying something different? What the hell is going on lol.
You get a ticket in your country? In the US, you go to jail in handcuffs, have your car impounded and have to hire a lawyer to go to court and that whole deal.
Ah, I'm in the US, I don't know the real punishment, I was just saying ticket as the idea of punishment haha.
The issue with your argument is the margin of error isn't present.
Every technical solution will have a margin of error. that needs to be small enough not to invalidate the law.
If 0.08 is the limit, and you blow 0.08 (or within the margin of error to shown up over 0.08) then you broke the law.
The law is not "your actual real world BAC", its your "measurable and demonstrable BAC".
This applies to everything, from radar guns to other technical solutions. Margin of errors exist and always will to some degree.
If the devices are outside a reasonable margin of error, then the state and/or manufacturer should be responsible, but there needs to be a known and accepted margin of error within the framework of the law, because frankly to do otherwise is just ignoring reality
Every technical solution will have a margin of error. that needs to be small enough not to invalidate the law.
If 0.08 is the limit, and you blow 0.08 (or within the margin of error to shown up over 0.08) then you broke the law.
The law is not "your actual real world BAC", its your "measurable and demonstrable BAC".
This applies to everything, from radar guns to other technical solutions. Margin of errors exist and always will to some degree.
If the devices are outside a reasonable margin of error, then the state and/or manufacturer should be responsible, but there needs to be a known and accepted margin of error within the framework of the law, because frankly to do otherwise is just ignoring reality
That's an interesting viewpoint, but I'm not sure margin of error matters, does it?
Ie, if 0.08 is the limit with a margin of error of 0.01, and you allow people to be in the margin of error, doesn't the limit simply become 0.09?
What if 0.08 was decided as the limit with a margin of error from 0.07?
At the end of the day, don't we always have hard limits? Whether the hard limit is before or after the margin of error seems to be a moot point in this discussion. And deciding that margin of error is a different discussion entirely, one mainly involved with the individual BAC testing units, effectiveness of BAC, etc.
edit: I feel like the down voter(s) are missing the point of my post. I was replying to someone in context of them saying that you cannot set a hard limit on which something is illegal. That is just silly. If a speed limit is 30mph with a margin of error of 2mph, than 33mph is over the speed limit. That is a hard limit you can absolutely set.
Ie, if 0.08 is the limit with a margin of error of 0.01, and you allow people to be in the margin of error, doesn't the limit simply become 0.09?
What if 0.08 was decided as the limit with a margin of error from 0.07?
At the end of the day, don't we always have hard limits? Whether the hard limit is before or after the margin of error seems to be a moot point in this discussion. And deciding that margin of error is a different discussion entirely, one mainly involved with the individual BAC testing units, effectiveness of BAC, etc.
edit: I feel like the down voter(s) are missing the point of my post. I was replying to someone in context of them saying that you cannot set a hard limit on which something is illegal. That is just silly. If a speed limit is 30mph with a margin of error of 2mph, than 33mph is over the speed limit. That is a hard limit you can absolutely set.
>but I'm not sure margin of error matters, does it?
It does in terms of "reality overrides perception" and "what we want doesn't change whats real". Our ability to set hard limits in law doesn't change the fact our ability to actually test for those limits always have some margin of error.
In this case, the argument is the devices may be wrong because they're up to 6-10% off in some cases. Is that enough to invalidate measurements because of the margin of error? That's something the law doesn't deal with properly, but it really should.
What is the maximum margin of error allowable in a device used to determine legal status of an individual (in terms of drunkeness in this case)? without that being specified in law, what is the biggest margin of error socially acceptable? 0 is not practical or possible, so it has to be some sort of number.
It does in terms of "reality overrides perception" and "what we want doesn't change whats real". Our ability to set hard limits in law doesn't change the fact our ability to actually test for those limits always have some margin of error.
In this case, the argument is the devices may be wrong because they're up to 6-10% off in some cases. Is that enough to invalidate measurements because of the margin of error? That's something the law doesn't deal with properly, but it really should.
What is the maximum margin of error allowable in a device used to determine legal status of an individual (in terms of drunkeness in this case)? without that being specified in law, what is the biggest margin of error socially acceptable? 0 is not practical or possible, so it has to be some sort of number.
I agree completely, but the point of this discussion (that I replied to) was that you cannot set a hard limit. I say you can, you just include a margin of error.
You are completely correct, margin of error exists. That doesn't change the fact that if you blow beyond the margin of error, you are guilty.
There will always be a hard limit beyond the margin of error. I feel like you're arguing against that. It's confusing to me.
> 0 is not practical or possible, so it has to be some sort of number.
No one said that, myself included. This feels like a straw man.
You are completely correct, margin of error exists. That doesn't change the fact that if you blow beyond the margin of error, you are guilty.
There will always be a hard limit beyond the margin of error. I feel like you're arguing against that. It's confusing to me.
> 0 is not practical or possible, so it has to be some sort of number.
No one said that, myself included. This feels like a straw man.
It is absolutely not a moot point.
The actual legal limit matters. You don't have a legal expectation as to the margin of error of the measurement.
You should have Legal expectation that whatever measurement is used, will only be considered evidence of a crime if the measurement exceeds the legal limit by more than the margin of error for that measurement.
The actual legal limit matters. You don't have a legal expectation as to the margin of error of the measurement.
You should have Legal expectation that whatever measurement is used, will only be considered evidence of a crime if the measurement exceeds the legal limit by more than the margin of error for that measurement.
> You should have Legal expectation that whatever measurement is used, will only be considered evidence of a crime if the measurement exceeds the legal limit by more than the margin of error for that measurement.
No, you should have the legal expectation that the measurement error data will be available to you as a defendant, and usable as exculpatory evidence. OTOH, generally the law does not require each piece of evidence to be highly dispositive in isolation, only that it tend to show the fact for which it is offered is more likely to be true than it would be in the absence of the piece of evidence.
And in many (most?) jurisdictions being over the BAC limit is a sufficient but not necessary condition for DUI. E.g., in California it is illegal to be either under the influence of alcohol, or over the BAC limit, when driving. A BAC over 0 but under the limit is supporting but not dispositive evidence of being under the influence, so certainly a BAC above but with the MoE of the limit would also be.
No, you should have the legal expectation that the measurement error data will be available to you as a defendant, and usable as exculpatory evidence. OTOH, generally the law does not require each piece of evidence to be highly dispositive in isolation, only that it tend to show the fact for which it is offered is more likely to be true than it would be in the absence of the piece of evidence.
And in many (most?) jurisdictions being over the BAC limit is a sufficient but not necessary condition for DUI. E.g., in California it is illegal to be either under the influence of alcohol, or over the BAC limit, when driving. A BAC over 0 but under the limit is supporting but not dispositive evidence of being under the influence, so certainly a BAC above but with the MoE of the limit would also be.
> You should have Legal expectation that whatever measurement is used, will only be considered evidence of a crime if the measurement exceeds the legal limit by more than the margin of error for that measurement.
I agree completely, and that is exactly what my point was.
If the hard limit is 0.09 because it's 0.08 with a margin of error of 0.01, then you're getting a ticket at 0.09.
Are you saying anything different?
I agree completely, and that is exactly what my point was.
If the hard limit is 0.09 because it's 0.08 with a margin of error of 0.01, then you're getting a ticket at 0.09.
Are you saying anything different?
It's not a hard limit though, it's a per measurement device / configuration / conditions limit. If the margin for error for a breathalyzer is .01 normal but .03 in cold conditions, then you should only use it as evidence with it measures a .11 in cold conditions rather than the .09 you would use in regular condidtions.
That's fair, but again though, you have to remember the context of the discussion, of which I think half of you are missing lol.
The OP I replied to (originally) was saying that a 0.7 was "close enough", that you are in the wrong for doing that, etcetc. Of which, you cannot write laws around.
This conversation has nothing to do with measurements, this conversation has nothing to do with margin of error, this has to do with written laws vs moral laws.
I'm having to defend a nothing debate lol.
The OP I replied to (originally) was saying that a 0.7 was "close enough", that you are in the wrong for doing that, etcetc. Of which, you cannot write laws around.
This conversation has nothing to do with measurements, this conversation has nothing to do with margin of error, this has to do with written laws vs moral laws.
I'm having to defend a nothing debate lol.
Margin of error is why the law is .08 and not .09.
I'm not sure what your point is, can you elaborate?
>What's happening in this thread right now is simply a difference of moral frameworks.
You can also hold the stricter standard as what you believe is your personal moral obligation and simultaneously believe that the looser legal standard is what you can morally apply to others.
This is true for many issues, such as free speech. I might think what you are saying is immoral (due to my personal ethics) while also thinking my censorship of you are saying would be immoral (and illegal, due to the legal framework I live in).
You can also hold the stricter standard as what you believe is your personal moral obligation and simultaneously believe that the looser legal standard is what you can morally apply to others.
This is true for many issues, such as free speech. I might think what you are saying is immoral (due to my personal ethics) while also thinking my censorship of you are saying would be immoral (and illegal, due to the legal framework I live in).
We, as a society, decided that 0.08 is the limit. And we have no idea how much marginal error are on these machines. If you want a different standard, try to get the legal limit changes to 0.06 or whatever!
What you're doing right now is giving the police even more ambiguous grey area to selectively enforce. And you're encouraging our laws to be inconsistent with their application.
What you're doing right now is giving the police even more ambiguous grey area to selectively enforce. And you're encouraging our laws to be inconsistent with their application.
I agree with your framework issue, but the fuzzy line between legal and illegal is
a common thread in many areas of life (if not most) and so I am surprised how devisive this is.
I suspect this is a rural v urban issue but i am not sure - can i ask where you live and how easy is it to get to a bar without a car?
I suspect this is a rural v urban issue but i am not sure - can i ask where you live and how easy is it to get to a bar without a car?
> I don't care that the law says that anything up to .08 is okay;
The DUI laws mostly don't say that, anyway.
The DUI laws mostly don't say that, anyway.
> If you got into the drivers seat at 0.07 you are doing something wrong.
Then change the law so .07 instead of .08.
Then change the law so .07 instead of .08.
So you’re okay with getting a speeding ticket for going 36 in a 40? 10% either way, right?
No, because 36 in a 40 isn't as likely to kill someone.
It's about as likely to kill someone as 44 in a 40 is.
Deviations from the speed of other traffic are what increase danger. You're just less liable if you're going slower than everyone else.
Deviations from the speed of other traffic are what increase danger. You're just less liable if you're going slower than everyone else.
.07 isn’t likely to kill anyone either. 0.08 isn’t exactly falling down drunk in the first place and .07 is less.
If you can provide some actual data for this, I'd be willing to consider it. The best I can find are some nhtsa stats that include collisions and fatalities for drivers with a .01 to .07 BAC, but it also includes the same stats for drivers with .00 BAC, so it doesn't look like they're identifying impairment as the primary cause of the collision: https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.gov/Api/Public/ViewPublication/... [pdf]
Also, from their appendix: "Drivers are considered to be alcohol-impaired when their BACs are .08 g/dL or higher. Thus, any fatal crash involving a driver with a BAC of .08 or higher is considered to be an alcohol-impaired-driving crash, and fatalities occurring in those crashes are considered to bealcohol-impaired-driving fatalities."
Too bad, that makes that particular study sort of useless for arguing the consequences of drunk driving.
Also, from their appendix: "Drivers are considered to be alcohol-impaired when their BACs are .08 g/dL or higher. Thus, any fatal crash involving a driver with a BAC of .08 or higher is considered to be an alcohol-impaired-driving crash, and fatalities occurring in those crashes are considered to bealcohol-impaired-driving fatalities."
Too bad, that makes that particular study sort of useless for arguing the consequences of drunk driving.
This is absurd. By your own admission you have no evidence that even 0.08 is unsafe (impairment is established by definition and not observation in your link) and yet you expect me to prove a negative and show that 0.07 is safe. 0.00 isn’t even safe. People have accidents while driving sober all the time.
The reality is that you are deferring to the law when you assume that 0.08 is proven unsafe. And that’s a pretty reasonable assumption. 0.08 was supposed to be established as the level at which essentially everyone demonstrates some level of impairment (whether that’s actually true, I don’t know). But you have no evidence that 0.07 is unsafe. You lack scientific evidence and you also lack the ability to defer to the law. So your belief is arbitrary.
You’re essentially saying that .08 is definitely unsafe because the law says so, so 0.07 must be unsafe, too, because it’s close. But this is unreasonable. If the law defines safety then defer to the law. Otherwise the law could be .07 and you’d be making this argument about .06. And so on.
The reality is that you are deferring to the law when you assume that 0.08 is proven unsafe. And that’s a pretty reasonable assumption. 0.08 was supposed to be established as the level at which essentially everyone demonstrates some level of impairment (whether that’s actually true, I don’t know). But you have no evidence that 0.07 is unsafe. You lack scientific evidence and you also lack the ability to defer to the law. So your belief is arbitrary.
You’re essentially saying that .08 is definitely unsafe because the law says so, so 0.07 must be unsafe, too, because it’s close. But this is unreasonable. If the law defines safety then defer to the law. Otherwise the law could be .07 and you’d be making this argument about .06. And so on.
Hey, dial it back a notch, okay?
My "admission" was that I could not find any data to support your claim that ".07 isn't likely to kill anyone either".
The NHTSA's statement on why .08 was chosen: https://one.nhtsa.gov/people/injury/research/pub/alcohol-law...
A TIME article considering whether .08 is too high: http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2025301,0...
The National Academy of Sciences recently recommended lowering the limit to .05: http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?Rec... (there are a few links to pdfs at the bottom with more details)
My original comment was a plea for people to reconsider driving while "just barely legal", because it wasn't worth the risks. You want to know if there is actually any risk. Well, here you go.
My "admission" was that I could not find any data to support your claim that ".07 isn't likely to kill anyone either".
The NHTSA's statement on why .08 was chosen: https://one.nhtsa.gov/people/injury/research/pub/alcohol-law...
A TIME article considering whether .08 is too high: http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2025301,0...
The National Academy of Sciences recently recommended lowering the limit to .05: http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?Rec... (there are a few links to pdfs at the bottom with more details)
My original comment was a plea for people to reconsider driving while "just barely legal", because it wasn't worth the risks. You want to know if there is actually any risk. Well, here you go.
So if a state has a limit of .05, are you OK with convicting people who blow a .04?
Not so much.
So the real problem here is that you want a lower limit. The margin of error has the effect of occasionally lowering that limit, so you're OK with it. You're OK with police incorrectly applying the law as long as the outcome is something that you agree with.
There are a few problems with that.
1. You're not always going to agree with the way the police incorrectly apply the law and police culture and procedure is harder to change than statutory limits.
2. The margin of error works both ways. It lets some people who are over a .08 go free. And it punishes some people who are below a .08.
We should strive to remove arbitrariness from our justice system. It's not always possible but we should try for it anyway.
There are a few problems with that.
1. You're not always going to agree with the way the police incorrectly apply the law and police culture and procedure is harder to change than statutory limits.
2. The margin of error works both ways. It lets some people who are over a .08 go free. And it punishes some people who are below a .08.
We should strive to remove arbitrariness from our justice system. It's not always possible but we should try for it anyway.
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Drivers almost kill me all the time. It's not illegal until they actually kill me. Why is that?
Shhh. Automobile enthusiasts are furiously pretending that the automobile itself is not the problem. They don't want to hear from cyclists and pedestrians.
> If you got into the drivers seat at 0.07 you are doing something wrong.
Not legally.
Not legally.
I agree that I'm all against anyone even getting near the wheel after drinking, and the police should have every good tool at their disposal to prevent it.
> "By the time an officer asks you to submit to a BAC test, they've already observed enough behavior to make them believe that you may be a danger to others."
Not true at all.
I know of numerous instances where people were required to blow into the breathalyzer with no prior observations related to substance impairment, or even a field sobriety test.
I personally had an instance where I was stopped for 'suspicion of speeding' where the officer got no high reading but thought I was going fast (possible; I'd seen an odd reflection off to the side of the road and braked a bit), I had been driving for hours and had consumed zero drinks for days, but he told me to sit in his cruiser and do the test. Seemed disappointed.
So a bad testing device could be a serious issue.
> "By the time an officer asks you to submit to a BAC test, they've already observed enough behavior to make them believe that you may be a danger to others."
Not true at all.
I know of numerous instances where people were required to blow into the breathalyzer with no prior observations related to substance impairment, or even a field sobriety test.
I personally had an instance where I was stopped for 'suspicion of speeding' where the officer got no high reading but thought I was going fast (possible; I'd seen an odd reflection off to the side of the road and braked a bit), I had been driving for hours and had consumed zero drinks for days, but he told me to sit in his cruiser and do the test. Seemed disappointed.
So a bad testing device could be a serious issue.
Take this from a lawyer: Even if you are drunk, talk to a lawyer before the blood test. There are scenarios where, without drinking more, your blood alcohol can increase between the time you are pulled out of the car and the time your blood is drawn. Mix alcohol and food and there can be significant delays between drinking, breath alcohol measurements, blood alcohol measurement, and actual intoxication. Remember that the crime involves having a blood/breath alcohol level WHILE DRIVING. "Drinking and driving" alone doesn't make you guilty.
I get very worried whenever "evidence" is taken far away from the offense. I've even heard about people who, after being arrested/released based on breath alcohol, are allowed to continue drinking and then have their blood drawn.
If you are stopped and are given a breathalyzer, pass or fail, do not drink anything for at least 24 hours. You never know what the cops are thinking. They may be back. They may test you again in 15 minutes. Don't go back to the party. If the cops test you, your night is over.
I get very worried whenever "evidence" is taken far away from the offense. I've even heard about people who, after being arrested/released based on breath alcohol, are allowed to continue drinking and then have their blood drawn.
If you are stopped and are given a breathalyzer, pass or fail, do not drink anything for at least 24 hours. You never know what the cops are thinking. They may be back. They may test you again in 15 minutes. Don't go back to the party. If the cops test you, your night is over.
> Remember that the crime involves having a blood/breath alcohol level WHILE DRIVING.
Yep. This. I was on jury duty last year for a case involving this exact scenario. The defense lawyer was able to successfully argue the case "to a reasonable doubt" based on this basis.
Yep. This. I was on jury duty last year for a case involving this exact scenario. The defense lawyer was able to successfully argue the case "to a reasonable doubt" based on this basis.
“Nice” thing about blood draw is that it’s going to take some time to get to a clinic, letting you loose 0.1 promile due to metabolism (or gain if you actually had a drink just before leaving). Sometimes you can even probably find ways to drag time...
Don’t drink and drive tho.
Don’t drink and drive tho.
In court they will just extrapolate from the blood results what your BAC would have been when pulled over, so this isn’t a silver bullet. Not drinking before driving definitely is though!
The BAC limit in most states is basically two drinks. That's moderate drinking, but if you get pulled over that's a DUI. If you have one drink but your breath is too hot, that's a DUI. If you have two drinks, walk for 6 hours and get behind the wheel, that's also a DUI because the time for your BAC to go down is more or less "all night". The legal limit is very, very low, to the point where reasonable behavior is illegal.
Basically the rule is "if you've had any alcohol in the last 24 hours, don't drive". Most people think you can have one or two and drive home, but you can't.
Basically the rule is "if you've had any alcohol in the last 24 hours, don't drive". Most people think you can have one or two and drive home, but you can't.
> If you have two drinks, walk for 6 hours and get behind the wheel, that's also a DUI because the time for your BAC to go down is more or less "all night".
Completely untrue - I've been a 'subject' in police department intoxication training, and have watched the BAC of myself and my fellow 'subjects' drop rather predicatbly over the course of an hour or two from 'going to jail' to 'probably shouldn't have driven but not over the limit'.
> The legal limit is very, very low, to the point where reasonable behavior is illegal.
Also untrue for most people - yes, if you are a high-function alcoholic you may be more able to perform basic tasks while at .08 or .1, but most people are significantly reduced in capcity when actually tested (not just 'I feel fine').
Completely untrue - I've been a 'subject' in police department intoxication training, and have watched the BAC of myself and my fellow 'subjects' drop rather predicatbly over the course of an hour or two from 'going to jail' to 'probably shouldn't have driven but not over the limit'.
> The legal limit is very, very low, to the point where reasonable behavior is illegal.
Also untrue for most people - yes, if you are a high-function alcoholic you may be more able to perform basic tasks while at .08 or .1, but most people are significantly reduced in capcity when actually tested (not just 'I feel fine').
> Completely untrue - I've been a 'subject' in police department intoxication training, and have watched the BAC of myself and my fellow 'subjects' drop rather predicatbly over the course of an hour or two from 'going to jail' to 'probably shouldn't have driven but not over the limit'.
This all depends on your body weight, your sex, your genetic ability to metabolize alcohol, what you're doing, and what you've eaten. It's also important to say most people don't carry around a field breathalyzer, so you can't tell how many hours you'll need to get under the limit because you have no idea what your BAC is.
This all depends on your body weight, your sex, your genetic ability to metabolize alcohol, what you're doing, and what you've eaten. It's also important to say most people don't carry around a field breathalyzer, so you can't tell how many hours you'll need to get under the limit because you have no idea what your BAC is.
> The BAC limit in most states is basically two drinks.
Very roughly true.
> If you have two drinks, walk for 6 hours and get behind the wheel, that's also a DUI because the time for your BAC to go down is more or less "all night".
No, it's in the neighborhood of 1 hour to drop 0.01% from most sources I can find.
EDIT:
> The legal limit is very, very low, to the point where reasonable behavior is illegal.
No, slamming two drinks and hopping immediately behind the wheel is not even approximately reasonable behavior.
Very roughly true.
> If you have two drinks, walk for 6 hours and get behind the wheel, that's also a DUI because the time for your BAC to go down is more or less "all night".
No, it's in the neighborhood of 1 hour to drop 0.01% from most sources I can find.
EDIT:
> The legal limit is very, very low, to the point where reasonable behavior is illegal.
No, slamming two drinks and hopping immediately behind the wheel is not even approximately reasonable behavior.
> No, it's in the neighborhood of 1 hour to drop 0.01% from most sources I can find.
Those are general guidelines. If you think they will apply to you then you're gambling. There are so many factors that influence this that the only safe thing to do is just not drive if you've been drinking at all.
> No, slamming two drinks and hopping immediately behind the wheel is not even approximately reasonable behavior.
Hey I'm not at all saying that. I'm saying if you have two beers in an hour -- which is completely reasonable -- and then drive home, you're probably driving drunk under the law.
Those are general guidelines. If you think they will apply to you then you're gambling. There are so many factors that influence this that the only safe thing to do is just not drive if you've been drinking at all.
> No, slamming two drinks and hopping immediately behind the wheel is not even approximately reasonable behavior.
Hey I'm not at all saying that. I'm saying if you have two beers in an hour -- which is completely reasonable -- and then drive home, you're probably driving drunk under the law.
> Those are general guidelines.
Well, actually 0.01% / 1 hour is a sizable cushion on top of the general guidelines, but sure.
> If you think they will apply to you then you're gambling.
Well, yeah, just like I'm gambling when I assume that I won't spontaneously development autobrewery syndrome and be intoxicated without drinking anything.
> There are so many factors that influence this that the only safe thing to do is just not drive if you've been drinking at all.
That's only a little less of an overstatement than to says that the only way to be safe from DUI arrest is never to drive at all.
Well, actually 0.01% / 1 hour is a sizable cushion on top of the general guidelines, but sure.
> If you think they will apply to you then you're gambling.
Well, yeah, just like I'm gambling when I assume that I won't spontaneously development autobrewery syndrome and be intoxicated without drinking anything.
> There are so many factors that influence this that the only safe thing to do is just not drive if you've been drinking at all.
That's only a little less of an overstatement than to says that the only way to be safe from DUI arrest is never to drive at all.
> That's only a little less of an overstatement than to says that the only way to be safe from DUI arrest is never to drive at all.
This is true. In most (all?) states, failing a roadside sobriety test is cause for a DUI arrest, and those are essentially subjective. Furthermore they're administered under extremely stressful circumstances, usually the terrain is uneven, cars are flying by, there are a dozen cops, it's nighttime and the lights are blinding, etc. If the officer thinks you're under the influence of _anything_ they can arrest you, with or without a test. The best defense you have against this is to never get in a car. The next best thing is to never to drive after you've had a drink in the last 24 hours.
This is true. In most (all?) states, failing a roadside sobriety test is cause for a DUI arrest, and those are essentially subjective. Furthermore they're administered under extremely stressful circumstances, usually the terrain is uneven, cars are flying by, there are a dozen cops, it's nighttime and the lights are blinding, etc. If the officer thinks you're under the influence of _anything_ they can arrest you, with or without a test. The best defense you have against this is to never get in a car. The next best thing is to never to drive after you've had a drink in the last 24 hours.
Remind me again why a device paid for with public funds and used to carry out essential public functions of the government should be anything but open source.
Because the software/IP isn't owned by the government.
I'd personally rather the US government pick the best solution, not the most open source one.
I would hope the best solution is open source, but the gov't shouldn't be forced to sacrifice quality.
However, I can agree that any Software/IP developed via public funds should definitely be open source.
I'd personally rather the US government pick the best solution, not the most open source one.
I would hope the best solution is open source, but the gov't shouldn't be forced to sacrifice quality.
However, I can agree that any Software/IP developed via public funds should definitely be open source.
How should the public verify the government has chosen the best solution if the design of the solution isn't readily available? Depending on your perspective and definition of best, faulty designs that give more favorable results could deliberately be chosen to increase revenue / crime stats.
Define "best." My definition would be something that's not only accurate in most conditions, but lets the accused mount a meaningful defense.
Comprehensive testing by an independent lab gets us partway, if all the results are available to the defense, but it's better if we can both do black box testing and examine the code.
Comprehensive testing by an independent lab gets us partway, if all the results are available to the defense, but it's better if we can both do black box testing and examine the code.
Trustworthyness is (or maybe should) be an criteria for things being used to provide data for legal matters. Being able to independently verify the device is critical for this, and open-source makes this easier.
> I'd personally rather the US government pick the best solution, not the most open source one.
I'd personally rather the US government consider trustworthiness, which is only afforded in open source projects, to be an important criteria for "best solution."
I'd personally rather the US government consider trustworthiness, which is only afforded in open source projects, to be an important criteria for "best solution."
the government buys some of very nearly everything and uses them to carry out essential public functions. you've got to have a better criteria than that.
The defense in a criminal case has the right to examine witnesses that presented evidence against them. When the witness is a machine, such an examination must necessarily include inspection of the operating protocols, technical specifications, calibration records, and source code.
Forcing the defense to ask for it in discovery for every single case seems somewhat counterproductive. If your code is being used to put people in prison, you don't get to keep your trade secrets privilege.
Forcing the defense to ask for it in discovery for every single case seems somewhat counterproductive. If your code is being used to put people in prison, you don't get to keep your trade secrets privilege.
It is counterproductive. It's also a feature of the system. At best (for the accused), thousands of dollars get spend on defense, pumping money into pockets of lawyers. At worst, the accused can't afford this level of defense and the DA gets another notch in their belt.
In Switzerland, breathalizers may be used to justify pulling people out during traffic controls, but only a blood test is valid proof of too much blood alcohol before court. Is that different in the US? After all, even ripe fruit can result in a breath test indicating too much alcohol.
There are now breathalyzers that are near enough as accurate as blood tests that are admissible in court these days.
But they are huge machines kept at the police station after you've been hauled in after failing the normal road side breathalyzer test.
But they are huge machines kept at the police station after you've been hauled in after failing the normal road side breathalyzer test.
>There are now breathalyzers that are near enough as accurate as blood tests
But in the general case this is quite simply not possible. It might be very accurate in the controlled case of a subject who hasn't consumed anything in the past hour but these breathalyzers are not being used in a nice controlled environment. The concentration of alcohol in a breath can vary wildly compared to the concentration in the blood. If someone used e.g. mouthwash a few minutes before being tested it will indicate a high BAC even if it's actually zero.
Unless the police are going to start forcing people to brush their teeth, clean their tongue, and use some form of non alcoholic mouthwash before testing you can't come close to the sort of accuracy that an actual blood test would give. In real world conditions there are too many situations where the concentration of alcohol in your breath is substantially different than the concentration of alcohol in your blood.
But in the general case this is quite simply not possible. It might be very accurate in the controlled case of a subject who hasn't consumed anything in the past hour but these breathalyzers are not being used in a nice controlled environment. The concentration of alcohol in a breath can vary wildly compared to the concentration in the blood. If someone used e.g. mouthwash a few minutes before being tested it will indicate a high BAC even if it's actually zero.
Unless the police are going to start forcing people to brush their teeth, clean their tongue, and use some form of non alcoholic mouthwash before testing you can't come close to the sort of accuracy that an actual blood test would give. In real world conditions there are too many situations where the concentration of alcohol in your breath is substantially different than the concentration of alcohol in your blood.
And that’s the type of machine being questioned in the article, not the roadside ones?
Should be clearer - and if those bulky machines are replaced with blood tests (assuming they are much more reliable) I don’t see the problem. Having doubt in the test used to bring someone to a second test is fine. The second test is used for conviction so there can’t be any doubt.
Should be clearer - and if those bulky machines are replaced with blood tests (assuming they are much more reliable) I don’t see the problem. Having doubt in the test used to bring someone to a second test is fine. The second test is used for conviction so there can’t be any doubt.
The police department says they "approved the instrument that best fit our business needs." It's a bit disturbing that they think of themselves as a business, especially since arguably their business need is to get as many convictions as possible.
I got a DWI in 2009, pre Uber/Lyft. I don't excuse my actions and I got what I deserved.
That being said, I would never consent to a breathalyzer or field sobriety test today sober or not. I see no issue with flexing our rights and really get tired of the "just comply" narrative.
That being said, I would never consent to a breathalyzer or field sobriety test today sober or not. I see no issue with flexing our rights and really get tired of the "just comply" narrative.
As opposed to pre taxis?
It should be know that in many jurisdictions (at least within the US) the officer's belief that you're impaired is usually enough for arrest - regardless of the outcome of any field sobriety tests or machine results.
On one hand I understand this approach due to the dizzying array of factors that cause impaired driving - from alcohol to prescription drugs to designer drugs that may not have definitive tests available. Seeing as sleep deprived drivers often perform as poorly as impaired drivers on various tests that should be included as well.
On the other, this is still a situation where an officer's opinion with no supporting evidence (or conflicting evidence) can lead to arrest.
Sure, you may "win" in front of a judge eventually but this is after you get handcuffed, spend the night in jail, have an arrest on your record, etc. Not to mention having your mugshot posted online by various unscrupulous sites running an extortion racket (demanding payment to remove). You'll soon discover that to many people simply being arrested = guilty.
In my case my "win" came 14 months later when the judge watched the dashcam footage, saw that my driving, speech, behavior, etc clearly wasn't impaired and threw the case out. Total time in court was less than 20 minutes.
Interestingly we watched the dash cam footage after the officer testified. At one point my attorney asked why the officer thought I was impaired. He responded with "I'm Irish Catholic and I know what drunk people look like". The entire courtroom (myself included) laughed.
On one hand I understand this approach due to the dizzying array of factors that cause impaired driving - from alcohol to prescription drugs to designer drugs that may not have definitive tests available. Seeing as sleep deprived drivers often perform as poorly as impaired drivers on various tests that should be included as well.
On the other, this is still a situation where an officer's opinion with no supporting evidence (or conflicting evidence) can lead to arrest.
Sure, you may "win" in front of a judge eventually but this is after you get handcuffed, spend the night in jail, have an arrest on your record, etc. Not to mention having your mugshot posted online by various unscrupulous sites running an extortion racket (demanding payment to remove). You'll soon discover that to many people simply being arrested = guilty.
In my case my "win" came 14 months later when the judge watched the dashcam footage, saw that my driving, speech, behavior, etc clearly wasn't impaired and threw the case out. Total time in court was less than 20 minutes.
Interestingly we watched the dash cam footage after the officer testified. At one point my attorney asked why the officer thought I was impaired. He responded with "I'm Irish Catholic and I know what drunk people look like". The entire courtroom (myself included) laughed.
> He responded with "I'm Irish Catholic and I know what drunk people look like".
Perhaps the officer was impaired.
Perhaps the officer was impaired.
I drink and drive all the time, which is to say, I will drive to a restaurant, enjoy dinner and drinks, wait, and then drive home.
In order to be sure that I've waited long enough to be safe, I bought a BACtrack S35 breathalyzer to keep in my car. In many, many years of testing myself, I have never seen a reading above 0.03, at which point I feel pretty impaired. If I'm over 0.02, I don't drive. I don't think I could stay conscious long enough to get myself up to the 0.08 legal limit.
All of which makes me wonder: can I trust this gadget to be properly calibrated? And how would I find out? The only way I can think of is to approach a police officer while drunk and ask them to breahalyze me so I can compare readings. Somehow, the opportunity to do that has never arisen.
It seems to me like a no-brainer that any establishment that serves alcohol ought to be required by law to have a properly calibrated breathalyzer on the premises for its customers to use. But of course this won't happen because the truth is we don't really want to know. We have drunk-driving theatre just like we have security theatre, and both seem to be a stable equilibrium.
Alas.
In order to be sure that I've waited long enough to be safe, I bought a BACtrack S35 breathalyzer to keep in my car. In many, many years of testing myself, I have never seen a reading above 0.03, at which point I feel pretty impaired. If I'm over 0.02, I don't drive. I don't think I could stay conscious long enough to get myself up to the 0.08 legal limit.
All of which makes me wonder: can I trust this gadget to be properly calibrated? And how would I find out? The only way I can think of is to approach a police officer while drunk and ask them to breahalyze me so I can compare readings. Somehow, the opportunity to do that has never arisen.
It seems to me like a no-brainer that any establishment that serves alcohol ought to be required by law to have a properly calibrated breathalyzer on the premises for its customers to use. But of course this won't happen because the truth is we don't really want to know. We have drunk-driving theatre just like we have security theatre, and both seem to be a stable equilibrium.
Alas.
BACTrac actually recommends you send it to them on a regular basis for calibration
Sure. But the results I get today are consistent with the ones I got when the unit was brand new. In fact, it's so consistent I can predict with very high accuracy what my reading will be just based on how much I've had to drink and how I feel. So if the unit is inaccurate now, it was inaccurate when it was new.
Also, we have two units, one in my car, one in my wife's car. I've tested myself back-to-back with both units (at home) several times and the readings are always consistent.
Also, we have two units, one in my car, one in my wife's car. I've tested myself back-to-back with both units (at home) several times and the readings are always consistent.
Yeah fair (and that's awesome, I think mine went out of calibration after like a year)... but like I said in another comment. If devices are inconsistent it doesn't really matter.
I use a cheap breath tester to see if I'm in ketosis when losing weight (burning fat creates ketones, which trigger breath tests).
Jus' sayin'.
Jus' sayin'.
You should be skeptical of the output of a ketone measurement device. You need to measure blood concentration of beta-hydroxybutyrate to accurately determine your ketosis situation.
What's the precision of that device?
How does that compare to using test strips?
The biggest flaw is that it doesn't actually measure drunkenness or impairment.
I’d rather have an objective measurement of blood alcohol than a subjective measurement of drunkenness. People can’t judge their own capability or drunkenness so even if you ace a reaction/driving/balance/whatever-test with a high blood alcohol level, there is nothing to say that you could have judged that ability.
That’s why the law isn’t against driving drunk or impaired it’s a law against driving with alcohol in your blood.
That’s why the law isn’t against driving drunk or impaired it’s a law against driving with alcohol in your blood.
Also, is "drunkenness" not something measured? I thought the effects on reaction time due to BAC were well understood. Are they not?
Decision making is more difficult to judge of course, but reaction time is massively important. So if we have a quantifiable measurement, who cares about vague things like drunkenness?
Though, if something like decision making goes south far before reaction time does, then I could totally see an argument being made against using BAC as a measurement. Yet, I don't believe that's the case.
Decision making is more difficult to judge of course, but reaction time is massively important. So if we have a quantifiable measurement, who cares about vague things like drunkenness?
Though, if something like decision making goes south far before reaction time does, then I could totally see an argument being made against using BAC as a measurement. Yet, I don't believe that's the case.
The argument is that BAC isn't a valid way to measure anything pertinent. It doesn't show how drunk you are, or how impaired you are, it just shows how much alcohol is in your blood. It sounds like a good measurement, except that alcohol affects everyone differently (both physically and mentally). One person could have a BAC of .03 and be unable to walk. Another person could have a BAC of .12 before they get wobbly. There are too many factors in play (weight, tolerance, metabolism, hydration, food, etc) to make the measurement meaningful in regard to driving ability.
> That’s why the law isn’t against driving drunk or impaired it’s a law against driving with alcohol in your blood.
It's often a law against doing either one, but if you are above they legal BAC limit that's much easier to prove beyond a reasonable doubt than is impairment due to alcohol.
It's often a law against doing either one, but if you are above they legal BAC limit that's much easier to prove beyond a reasonable doubt than is impairment due to alcohol.
You'd still need to be stopped, which would still take an officer observing erratic behaviour, and he'd still make you walk in a straight line and ask you questions to check if you are slurring your speech. And then you'd still need to be tested to see if you are over the legal limit.
So maybe you mean that the law shouldn't be based on BAC?
So maybe you mean that the law shouldn't be based on BAC?
Every time I've been stopped, the "erratic behavior" was it being late at night and me being out on the road. I was stone cold sober on every stop, and at night I always drive particularly careful as the cops are much more likely to pay attention to you in particular.
At one "rolling a stop sign" stop, the cop basically admitted I hadn't rolled the sign, they just wanted to make sure I hadn't been drinking - "Yeah, I just wanted to make sure you hadn't been drinking, have a good night."
At one "rolling a stop sign" stop, the cop basically admitted I hadn't rolled the sign, they just wanted to make sure I hadn't been drinking - "Yeah, I just wanted to make sure you hadn't been drinking, have a good night."
With stronger reckless driving laws then we can get rid of DUI and cell phone laws. If you're driving recklessly and putting other people in danger, it shouldn't matter how you got there. Drinking, prescription drugs, lack of sleep, cell phone usage, eating, reading, and watching the coast as you drive by are all examples of things that can have equally bad results. Yet we focus almost completely on convicting people based on some arbitrary measurement and sobriety tests designed to make you fail. We should instead convict people based on endangering others.
Agree but reckless driving is subjective and harder to define which is why we have specific laws that are so concrete.
edit: subjective, not objective :\
edit: subjective, not objective :\
I think you mean subjective, not objective? I do think reckless driving laws need to be modified, also. Here's an example, from Mississippi [1]:
> Any person who drives any vehicle in such a manner as to indicate either a wilful or a wanton disregard for the safety of persons or property is guilty of reckless driving. Reckless driving shall be considered a greater offense than careless driving.
> Every person convicted of reckless driving shall be punished upon a first conviction by a fine of not less than Five Dollars ($ 5.00) nor more than One Hundred Dollars ($ 100.00), and on a second or subsequent conviction he may be punished by imprisonment for not more than ten (10) days or by a fine of not exceeding Five Hundred Dollars ($ 500.00), or by both.
The way it's defined does seem a bit subjective. I'm sure this can be addressed, but at least in this example, it's not immediately clear to me how it can be improved. I would probably get some ideas by looking at other states. The penalties, however, could absolutely be increased. In comparison, the punishment for a first offense DUI [2]:
> (a) First offense DUI.
> (i) Upon conviction of any person for the first offense of violating subsection (1) of this section where chemical tests under Section 63-11-5 were given, or where chemical test results are not available, the person shall be fined not less than Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($ 250.00) nor more than One Thousand Dollars ($ 1,000.00), or imprisoned for not more than forty-eight (48) hours in jail, or both; the court shall order the person to attend and complete an alcohol safety education program as provided in Section 63-11-32 within six (6) months of sentencing. The court may substitute attendance at a victim impact panel instead of forty-eight (48) hours in jail.
> (ii) Suspension of commercial driving privileges is governed by Section 63-1-216.
> (iii) A qualifying first offense may be nonadjudicated by the court under subsection (14) of this section. The holder of a commercial driver's license or a commercial learning permit at the time of the offense is ineligible for nonadjudication.
> (iv) Eligibility for an interlock-restricted license is governed by Section 63-11-31 and suspension of regular driving privileges is governed by Section 63-11-23.
The penalties are much more, though the end result of the illegal act itself are the same. The only difference is that you drank a couple beers instead of taking your prescription medications. I picked Mississippi simply because I live here currently, but it's similar with all the states I've looked at.
[1] https://law.justia.com/codes/mississippi/2013/title-63/chapt... [2] https://law.justia.com/codes/mississippi/2017/title-63/chapt...
> Any person who drives any vehicle in such a manner as to indicate either a wilful or a wanton disregard for the safety of persons or property is guilty of reckless driving. Reckless driving shall be considered a greater offense than careless driving.
> Every person convicted of reckless driving shall be punished upon a first conviction by a fine of not less than Five Dollars ($ 5.00) nor more than One Hundred Dollars ($ 100.00), and on a second or subsequent conviction he may be punished by imprisonment for not more than ten (10) days or by a fine of not exceeding Five Hundred Dollars ($ 500.00), or by both.
The way it's defined does seem a bit subjective. I'm sure this can be addressed, but at least in this example, it's not immediately clear to me how it can be improved. I would probably get some ideas by looking at other states. The penalties, however, could absolutely be increased. In comparison, the punishment for a first offense DUI [2]:
> (a) First offense DUI.
> (i) Upon conviction of any person for the first offense of violating subsection (1) of this section where chemical tests under Section 63-11-5 were given, or where chemical test results are not available, the person shall be fined not less than Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($ 250.00) nor more than One Thousand Dollars ($ 1,000.00), or imprisoned for not more than forty-eight (48) hours in jail, or both; the court shall order the person to attend and complete an alcohol safety education program as provided in Section 63-11-32 within six (6) months of sentencing. The court may substitute attendance at a victim impact panel instead of forty-eight (48) hours in jail.
> (ii) Suspension of commercial driving privileges is governed by Section 63-1-216.
> (iii) A qualifying first offense may be nonadjudicated by the court under subsection (14) of this section. The holder of a commercial driver's license or a commercial learning permit at the time of the offense is ineligible for nonadjudication.
> (iv) Eligibility for an interlock-restricted license is governed by Section 63-11-31 and suspension of regular driving privileges is governed by Section 63-11-23.
The penalties are much more, though the end result of the illegal act itself are the same. The only difference is that you drank a couple beers instead of taking your prescription medications. I picked Mississippi simply because I live here currently, but it's similar with all the states I've looked at.
[1] https://law.justia.com/codes/mississippi/2013/title-63/chapt... [2] https://law.justia.com/codes/mississippi/2017/title-63/chapt...
Yes, I meant subjective. :\ I don't believe it's possible to define reckless driving objectively. Does crossing across a double-yellow line constitute reckless driving? What if you're doing it to avoid a deer? Or a pothole? Or at very low speed? What if you do it at the speed limit and there's no obstruction and there is heavy traffic, but a child in your car is choking and you're look back at them to make sure they're okay?
There are too many things that could be considered reckless and even more things that could be extenuating. The penalty for reckless driving could certainly be higher, though, since it's defined as willful or wanton disregard.
The DUI law you cited already covers prescription drugs, by the way. "Is under the influence of any other substance that has impaired the person's ability to operate a motor vehicle;"
There are too many things that could be considered reckless and even more things that could be extenuating. The penalty for reckless driving could certainly be higher, though, since it's defined as willful or wanton disregard.
The DUI law you cited already covers prescription drugs, by the way. "Is under the influence of any other substance that has impaired the person's ability to operate a motor vehicle;"
Your point about the subjectiveness is well noted, I hadn't much considered it before.
You are correct in that the DUI law covers prescription drugs. I hadn't noticed that until you pointed it out. It's rare though, from what I see, for a DUI case to be about anything other than BAC. I have no actual statistics on that.
I guess in my earlier comment the prescription drug part can be replaced by using a cell phone.
You are correct in that the DUI law covers prescription drugs. I hadn't noticed that until you pointed it out. It's rare though, from what I see, for a DUI case to be about anything other than BAC. I have no actual statistics on that.
I guess in my earlier comment the prescription drug part can be replaced by using a cell phone.
> It's rare though, from what I see, for a DUI case to be about anything other than BAC. I have no actual statistics on that.
That's because BAC is easy to measure. If you want to prosecute for BAC, you just need trusted test results. If you want to prosecute for impaired driving in general, you need to prove actual impairment, which is tough. This is why MADD campaigned for the .08 limit nationwide. It's easy to enforce.
That's because BAC is easy to measure. If you want to prosecute for BAC, you just need trusted test results. If you want to prosecute for impaired driving in general, you need to prove actual impairment, which is tough. This is why MADD campaigned for the .08 limit nationwide. It's easy to enforce.
Sorry - in my town the police pull over drivers late at night trying to get DUI arrests - the “reason” for the stop is almost always a minor lane violation - then a mandatory breathlizer if you pass no ticket is issued, and you’re on you way - if not you’re going to jail.
Point is the pretext for the stop is nonsense...
Point is the pretext for the stop is nonsense...
If you're going to be arresting people for DUI, you need an objective measure of impairment. Whether or not someone can walk in a straight line or say the middle third of the alphabet should be plenty for probably cause but not enough to arrest someone.
BAC isn't an objective measure of impairment, it's a measure of BAC.
But short of an actual objective test, arresting people for driving after consuming alcohol is plenty reasonable to me.
But short of an actual objective test, arresting people for driving after consuming alcohol is plenty reasonable to me.
> BAC isn't an objective measure of impairment
It is, it's just not a precise one. (Yes, it's an indirect proxy measure, but so are all measures on some levem.)
It is, it's just not a precise one. (Yes, it's an indirect proxy measure, but so are all measures on some levem.)
So you want the legal limit to drive to be 0.0? Or something else? How long after I have half a glass of wine with dinner do I need to wait before I can drive?
No, I'm just saying it isn't really an objective measure of impairment, but that's fine, people over some limit have clearly been drinking enough that they still shouldn't be allowed to drive.
There is at least one model where, if the officer covers the outlet tube, the reading doubles extremely reliably. I saw this tested in a short documentary some years back.
If you're going to get breathalyzed, will you notice if the officer is doing something shady? Could you even know, without knowledge of the various machines?
I'm also quite miffed that a cop can give you a DUI even if your reported (by the machine) BAC is under the legal limit, 0.00 included.
If you're going to get breathalyzed, will you notice if the officer is doing something shady? Could you even know, without knowledge of the various machines?
I'm also quite miffed that a cop can give you a DUI even if your reported (by the machine) BAC is under the legal limit, 0.00 included.
Years ago, on "L.A. Law", a story arc had one of the lawyers stopped for weaving. His partner advised him, "breath or unine -- not blood!". This was in CA, which gives the driver his/her choice of the three methods.
Are there cases where blood disfavors the suspect?
Are there cases where blood disfavors the suspect?
This is news to exactly nobody who ever read the manufacturer specs of the sensors used in devices that detect alcohol for law enforcement.
They're running industrial process control sensors at the limits of their range and in widely changing environment. It should come as no surprise that they're hard to calibrate accurately and likewise deliver variable results in a lot of cases
In a factory environment equipment doesn't get calibrated in a 70deg car and used in 20deg winter air to measure 90deg human breath. In law enforcement that's exactly what happens.
Ankle bracelets are even worse.
The fact of the matter is that most hardware/software solutions sold to law enforcement are only a small step above the scam bomb-detectors that got sold to the Iraq government (Google it if you're unfamiliar with the story).
If NASA were writing the calibration code, the results weren't being interpreted by laymen and their interpretation wasn't being used to destroy lives I'd feel differently.
They're running industrial process control sensors at the limits of their range and in widely changing environment. It should come as no surprise that they're hard to calibrate accurately and likewise deliver variable results in a lot of cases
In a factory environment equipment doesn't get calibrated in a 70deg car and used in 20deg winter air to measure 90deg human breath. In law enforcement that's exactly what happens.
Ankle bracelets are even worse.
The fact of the matter is that most hardware/software solutions sold to law enforcement are only a small step above the scam bomb-detectors that got sold to the Iraq government (Google it if you're unfamiliar with the story).
If NASA were writing the calibration code, the results weren't being interpreted by laymen and their interpretation wasn't being used to destroy lives I'd feel differently.
This is not really news. For example in Texas, DWI lawyers run a lucrative racket combating breathalyzer test results using the known flaws in the machine and its application. Blood tests are considered more definitive and harder to defend against.
Why is it a racket?
Why would it even be possible to disable sensors critical to getting a credible estimate of blood alcohol? It all sounds like a convenient way to boost revenue with false positives while hiding behind the techno-wizardry.
In fact, many jurisdictions have requirements that, above a breathalyzer-reported BAC threshold, different minimum mandatory punishments are levied. Sure, a sober person won't get a result that's above the legal limit most of the time, but someone who's done some drinking and is within appropriate parameters is often labeled as DUI, and could potentially register as above this higher, mandatory-jailtime, mandatory-felony situation.
I've known of cases where the breathalyzer in question has been shown to be broken and decommissioned, yet the people whose numbers were so wildly inflated that they couldn't possibly be accurate have still been convicted using these numbers.
In one case in particular, the judge ruled that the evidence on the unreliability of the machines in general (and this machine in particular) was not admissible for court.
It's about punishment, not deterrence.