SC DUI Attorney – What Juries Really “See” When They “Hear” DUI

This recent article shows how dangerous truly impaired drivers can be. Here, the DUI suspect lost control of his vehicle, striking a marked police car first and then a building. High speed in conjunction with drunk driving can be fatal and cause serious damage to innocent drivers and pedestrians. Sadly, anyone charged, whether guilty or not, is associated with the pictures below. The public now has an implanted image of what “drunk drivers” can do, and frankly, it scares all of us.

As a DUI criminal defense attorney with Reeves, Aiken & Hightower LLP, the first thing that has to be done at trial is to “reset” the jury to understand that our clients are “presumed innocent” and that cases like the one below almost never go to trial. Instead, our clients are everyday people who have had a drink with dinner, or a beer with friend, but are perfectly safe to drive. Because of news stories like the one below, police are aggressively arresting virtually anyone who has alcohol on their breath when stopped for any reason. At checkpoints, they may say they are looking for license and registration infractions, but they are really there to arrest “drunk drivers.” You can be certain that if they smell “alcohol on or about (your) person,” you are going to spend the night in jail no matter what you do or say at that point. If you decline to participate in field sobriety tests, you will be arrested. If you attempt these awkward tests, you will invariably fail and be put in the back of the police car. You get the idea.

If arrested for a SC DUI, it is critical that you retain an experienced DUI attorney who focuses their criminal practice on this specialized area. We would also recommend that you look at firms with former DUI prosecutors as these individuals have unique insights on how to address the various legal issues raised. At Reeves, Aiken & Hightower LLP, our criminal defense lawyers are seasoned trial attorneys. With over 70 years combined litigation experience. Please visit our website www.rjrlaw.com to find out more about our lawyers. Compare our attorneys’ credentials to any other law firm. Then call us at 877-374-5999 for a confidential consultation of your case.

Recent DUI crashes lead to weekend checkpoints

Posted: Jan 27, 2012 6:11 PM ESTUpdated: Feb 06, 2012 6:11 PM EST
Car crashed into Greek Boys restaurant (Source: CPD)Car crashed into Greek Boys restaurant (Source: CPD)

Police car from crash at Sumter and Hampton streets (Source: CPD)Police car from crash at Sumter and Hampton streets (Source: CPD)

Police car from crash at Sumter and Hampton streets (Source: CPD)Police car from crash at Sumter and Hampton streets (Source: CPD)

COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) – Columbia-area police agencies are teaming up to operate DUI safety checkpoints this weekend following a string of recent DUI-related crashes.

Officers from Columbia Police, University of South Carolina Police Department and the South Carolina Highway Patrol  will focus their efforts on areas throughout Columbia where DUI related collisions and offenses have occurred.  Those areas include the Vista, Five Points, and along main roadways like Assembly Street, Elmwood Avenue, Gervais Street, Huger Street and Blossom Street.

The checkpoints run from Friday night through Sunday night.

Officers will be looking for impaired drivers, drivers license violations and checking child safety seats.

Columbia Police Chief Randy Scott says in the past several months, five Columbia police officers have been hit by drunk drivers.

Two crashes occurred last weekend. Fort Jackson Military Police Officer Joshua Waters was charged with DUI and open container after investigators say he crashed into a police cruiser at Sumter and Hampton Streets in downtown Columbia Saturday morning.  After hitting the police car, investigators say Waters’ vehicle crashed into the Greek Boys Restaurant on Sumter Street.

And Sunday, a suspected drunk driver crashed into a police officer at the intersection of Gervais and Washington Streets.

The officers involved in those wrecks were treated at local hospitals.  None of them sustained serious injuries.

Copyright 2012 WIS.  All rights reserved.


Charlotte DWI Lawyer – Implied Consent Warnings – Non-English Speaking Defendants – Part II

Below is the second part of the thought provoking article by Ms. Denning addressing whether due process requires that implied consent warnings be advised in a defendant’s native language in order to assure understanding of same. Ironically, the relatively simple question has no current appellate answer. Common sense has taken a backseat to legal analysis. That which would appear rhetorical has countervailing arguments and strong positions for both sides. Of course, we forget that there are other countries represented in immigration matters besides hispanic. Certainly, people from central and latin america are the predominant immigrants to the United States, but there are other nationalities involved as well. It would seem, nevertheless, in this enlightened computer age that use of a language converter program easily available on the internet could translate the implied consent warnings into virtually any dialect and provide defendants with fair notice of their rights. Only lawyers take the simple and make it unnecessarily complex.

The criminal defense attorneys of Reeves, Aiken & Hightower LLP provide aggressive representation of those individuals accused on a crime. Our primary focus in criminal court is DWI, but we also routinely fight charges of DWLR, CDV, drug offenses, as well as all NC traffic violations. Our lawyers are available to speak with you directly, and we have spanish-speaking staff onsite to help our non-English speaking clients. For more information about our firm, please visit www.rjrlaw.com. Compare our attorneys’ credentials to any other law firm. Then call us for a private, confidential consultation at 704-499-9000.

Providing Notice of Implied Consent Rights to Persons Who Do Not Speak English (Part II)

February 2nd, 2011

By Shea Denning

Part I of this post left for another day consideration of whether a defendant who does not speak English may be deemed to have willfully refused a chemical analysis when notice of the implied consent rights is provided only in English and whether providing notice only in English may violate such a defendant’s constitutional rights. That day has arrived. [Editor’s note: already!]

Rather than considering notice of implied consent rights as properly provided when the rights are read as set out in the statute, even if they are read in English to a non-English speaking defendant, the appropriate focus may be upon whether the officer used reasonable methods to convey those warnings. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin in State v. Piddington, 623 N.W.2d 528 (Wis. 2001), employed such an approach to determine whether an officer appropriately conveyed implied consent warnings to a deaf defendant. The Supreme Court of Iowa adopted the Piddington approach in State v. Garcia, 756 N.W.2d 216 (Iowa 2008), determining that the officer in that case used reasonable methods to convey implied consent warnings to a defendant who understood limited English.

If reasonableness is the touchstone, then it must require something more than stating the rights in English to a person who does not understand the language, though it may not require than an interpreter be provided in every instance. Cf. State v. Ortez, 178 N.C. App. 236, 245 (2006) (holding that grammatical errors in Raleigh Police Department’s Spanish translation of Miranda warnings did not render warnings inadequate as adequacy is determined by whether warnings reasonably convey Miranda rights). For example, providing a copy of implied consent warnings translated into Spanish for literate Spanish-speaking defendants—a practice already utilized by many chemical analysts—may be sufficient. But see People v. Garcia-Cepero, 2008 WL 4681928 (N.Y. Super. Ct. October 23, 2008) (holding that a defendant who did not speak English was not provided warnings about taking a breath test in “clear and unequivocal language,” even though the defendant, who spoke Spanish, was shown a video in which the warnings were translated into Spanish). Utilization of a telephonic interpreter service, such as that provided for use of judicial officials by the Administrative Office of the Courts, also might be a reasonable option for conveying the warnings, if such a service was available. Evaluation of the reasonableness of the warnings requires consideration of the fact that alcohol dissipates from breath and blood over time and that the very purpose of the implied consent law is to facilitate the gathering of evidence as to a defendant’s alcohol concentration. See Piddington, 623 N.W.2d at 542. Thus, it may be unreasonable for the State to delay testing for hours awaiting the arrival of an interpreter.

Is it a violation of the constitutional right to equal protection under the law for the State to provide notice of implied consent rights solely in English since non-English speaking defendants, unlike their English-speaking counterparts, are unable to understand the warnings? State supreme courts in Georgia and Illinois have held that it is not. SeeRodriguez v. State, 565 S.E.2d 458 (Ga. 2002); People v. Wegielnik, 605 N.E.2d 487 (Ill. 1992). The implied consent statutes in Georgia and Illinois, like North Carolina’s, are silent regarding the language in which the warnings must be given. Thus, the statutes, on their face, create no classification differentiating among similarly situated persons. Noting that a facially neutral statute violates equal protection only when enacted or applied with a discriminatory purpose, Rodriguez and Wegielnik determined that the defendant had failed to demonstrate any such discriminatory purpose.

Rodriguez further held that even if Georgia’s implied consent law does classify defendants based upon whether they speak English, it nevertheless is constitutional. In so holding, Rodriguez rejected the notion that a classification based on language is a proxy for a suspect classification, such as one based on national origin. Other courts likewise have rejected this argument. See Flores v. Texas, 904 S.W.2d 129, 130 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995) (en banc) (rejecting defendant’s argument that different treatment based on his inability to speak English is equivalent to discrimination based on race or national origin); Kustura v. Department of Labor and Industries, 175 P.3d 1117, 1132-33 (Wash. App. 2008) (“While there is some authority that singling out speakers of a particular language merits strict scrutiny, no case had held that the provision of services in the English language amounts to discrimination against non-English speakers based on ethnicity or national origin.”). Because language classification is not a suspect classification, the Rodriguez court determined that the statute need only survive rational basis review, a test it easily met on the bases that reading rights in English informs most drivers, providing notice of rights in each driver’s native language would impose severe administrative costs, and waiting for an interpreter could delay obtaining a driver’s blood alcohol concentration, which dissipates over time.

The defendant in Rodriguez also argued that due process required that a driver be meaningfully advised of implied consent rights so that he or she could exercise those rights in a meaningful fashion. The court disagreed, characterizing implied consent warnings as “a matter of legislative grace,” and concluding that due process does not require that the warnings be given in a language that the driver understands. 565 S.E.2d at 462. The Weigelnik court likewise concluded that “[b]ecause due process does not require that the summary suspension warnings be given at all, it does not require that they be given in a language the defendant understands.” 605 N.E.2d at 491. This language brings to mind the North Carolina Supreme Court’s characterization of the right to refuse testing as “a matter of grace” granted by the legislature and not a constitutional right. State v. Howren, 312 N.C. 454, 457 (1984).

Garcia-Cepero , an unpublished decision of a trial judge in New York, is the only opinion I’ve discovered that deems the failure to provide an interpreter to deliver implied consent warnings in a language the defendant understands a violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights. 2008 WL 4681928. The analysis in Garcia-Cepero is muddied by the court’s finding that defendants who did not speak English were given only chemical tests, while English speakers were given field sobriety and chemical tests, and by the court’s analysis of the due process violation as one of procedural, rather than substantive, due process. Nevertheless, Garcia-Cepero merits review for its conclusion that the failure to provide an interpreter for the chemical analysis and field sobriety tests violates a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to present a complete defense.

I previously noted that no North Carolina appellate opinions address the providing of implied consent warnings to persons who do not speak English. I’m guessing, however, that some readers have litigated this issue in district and superior court. I’d love to hear from you about how the issue was raised and resolved, whether there are procedures employed to advise non-English speakers of their rights that I have failed to mention, and your thoughts about the appropriate analysis.

Charlotte DWI Lawyer – Implied Consent Warnings – Non-English Speaking Defendants – Part I

The first of a two part article below raises and discusses an interesting point regarding implied consent warnings prior to submitting to a breathalyzer chemical analysis. With the growth of non-English speaking defendants, is there actually a right to be explained in a defendant’s native language? How many different languages would be necessary? Would interpreters be required? Currently, the NC caselaw is silent on this issue. However, Ms. Denning explores legislative intent in drafting the implied consent statute. It is an interesting debate of whether the statute just requires a robotic reading of the implied consent rights in English or whether some form of meaningful understanding is actually envisioned.

The criminal attorneys at Reeves, Aiken & Hightower LLP appreciate the subtle nuances of DWI laws and will fight to make certain the State proves each and every element required beyond a reasonable doubt. Our lawyers are aggressive trial attorneys and are not afraid to go to court. To find out more about our credentials and qualifications, please visit our firm’s website at www.rjrlaw.com. We welcome an opportunity to review your case. Call us today at 704-499-9000 and schedule a private consultation.

Providing Notice of Implied Consent Rights to Persons Who Do Not Speak English

February 1st, 2011

By Shea Denning

Several earlier posts addressed the requirement that a person arrested for an implied consent offense be informed of statutory implied consent rights before being asked to submit to a chemical analysis. Subsequent posts addressed the remedy for failure to adhere to these statutory requirements.

None of those posts, and indeed no North Carolina appellate court decision, addresses the circumstance in which a chemical analyst advises a defendant of the implied consent rights by reading them and providing a copy in writing, but the oral advice and the writing are in English, a language the defendant does not speak or comprehend.

If such a defendant submits to a chemical analysis, are the results subject to suppression at trial? What if the defendant refuses? Is the refusal admissible at trial as evidence of the defendant’s guilt?

G.S. 20-16.2 does not require that notice of implied consent rights be provided in any particular language, though the practice is to read the rights in English and provide a copy of the rights written in English. Perhaps the inquiry ends there, at least for determining whether results of a chemical analysis are admissible at trial. The argument in support of this view is that notice provided in English is provided in accordance with the statute; thus, there is no basis for suppression. This view is supported by the purpose of the warnings, which is “to provide scientific evidence of intoxication not only for the purpose of convicting the guilty and removing them from the public highways for the safety of others, but also to protect the innocent by eliminating mistakes from objective observation such as a driver who has the odor of alcohol on his breath when in fact his consumption is little or those who appear to be intoxicated but actually suffer from some unrelated cause.” Seders v. Powell, 298 N.C. 543, 552 (1979). The warnings “ensure cooperation in providing scientific evidence and avoid incidents of violence in testing by force.” Id.

Since notice is provided to secure submission to a chemical analysis rather than to procure a knowing, voluntary and intelligent waiver of rights, the statutory purposes are met when the person submits to testing, regardless of whether the person knew of the right to refuse testing. See Yokoyama v. Commissioner of Public Safety, 356 N.W.2d 830, 831 (Minn. App. 1984) (rejecting the argument of a petitioner who “willingly blew into the testing machine” that he had a statutory right to have the implied consent advisory read to him in Japanese and finding that he “understood he was being asked to take the test,” which was the only understanding required). Adherents of the view that informing a defendant of the rights in English is sufficient, regardless of the person’s subjective understanding, might further conclude that such a person can refuse testing by exhibiting a positive intention to disobey the chemical analyst’s instructions, regardless of whether the person understands the consequences of that conduct. See Martinez v. Peterson, 322 N.W.2d 386, 388 (Neb. 1982) (holding that person is required to understand only that he or she has been asked to take a test and that “[t]here is no defense to refusal that [the person] does not understand the consequences of refusal or is not able to make a reasonable judgment as to what course of action to take”).

Assuming, for now, that the arguments set forth above reflect how a North Carolina court would analyze the admissibility of a chemical analysis or evidence of refusal in a criminal trial on impaired driving charges, let’s progress to the more complicated question.  May a person who does not speak the language in which the notice of implied consent rights is provided be deemed to have willfully refused a chemical test?

Recall that a willful refusal occurs when a person (1) is aware that he or she has a choice to submit to or refuse a chemical analysis, (2) is aware of the time limit within which he or she must submit, and (3) voluntarily elects not to submit or knowingly permits the prescribed thirty minute time limit to expire before electing to submit. Etheridge v. Peters, 301 N.C. 76, 81 (1980). What does it mean for a person to be “aware” of the choice and time limit? Given that there must be probable cause to believe that a person has committed an implied consent offense—many of which require proof of impairment— before a person may be requested to submit to such a test, the legislature must have anticipated that some defendants’ abilities to understand the warnings would be compromised by their present condition. Presumably, the legislature did not intend for the very defendants whose behavior is targeted by the law to escape the sanction of a twelve-month license revocation for willfully refusing a chemical analysis.

Indeed, the state supreme court in Joyner v. Garrett, 279 N.C. 226 (1971), rejected the defendant’s contention that he was too drunk to have willfully refused the breath test, finding the officer’s testimony that defendant refused to submit saying “‘he was a taxpayer and he didn’t have to take it’” sufficient evidence of willful refusal. The officer’s testimony that he did not know whether the defendant understood what he told him did not figure in the court’s analysis. Likewise, in Rice v. Peters, 48 N.C. App. 697 (1980), the court of appeals rejected the defendant’s argument that he had not willfully refused a breath test when he refused to cooperate by speaking in “a loud and boisterous manner drowning out [the chemical analyst’s] words” and making no response when the chemical analyst said he was being marked as a refusal, notwithstanding the defendant’s assertion at the time the rights were read that he did not understand them. Explaining that the purpose of the implied-consent testing statute is fulfilled when a person is given the opportunity to submit or refuse to submit to a chemical analysis and his decision is made after having been advised of his rights in a manner provided by statute, the court held that the defendant had willfully refused by refusing to cooperate. The court did not inquire into the defendant’s subjective understanding of his rights. Thus, it would be a departure from precedent to conclude that subjective understanding of the warnings on the part of the defendant is required; moreover, such an interpretation would absurdly afford relief to the obstreperous or highly intoxicated defendant, a result the legislature surely did not intend.

If subjective understanding is not relevant and G.S. 20-16.2 does not require that implied consent rights be conveyed to a defendant in a language that he or she understands, then the matter of willful refusal isn’t any more complicated than that of refusal, discussed earlier in this post.  See, e.g., People v. Wegielnik, 605 N.E.2d 487, 491 (Ill. 1992) (finding “no meaningful distinction between a motorist who cannot comprehend the statutory warnings because of injury or intoxication, and one who does not understand them due to insufficient English language skills.”). Yet I wonder whether our courts would view lack of understanding resulting from a language barrier differently from lack of understanding caused by intoxication or belligerence.  See, e.g., People v. Garcia-Cepero, 2008 WL 4681928 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. October 23, 2008) (distinguishing case of a defendant who does not speak or understand English from that of a person too intoxicated to understand implied consent warnings). Moreover, might our courts find a constitutional violation in the failure to afford non-English speaking defendants notice of implied consent rights?  Part II of this Post will explore these issues.

SC Workers’ Compensation Attorney – Use of Interpreters / Translators at Hearings

Recognizing the growing influx of immigrants into our State, the Commission is currently developing guidelines for the use of interpreters and translators. More and more agricultural and production workers are from foreign countries, and injuries are starting to be reported. As many of these employees are here illegally, their accidents, many times serious, go unreported for fear of deportation. However, there has been a significant and increasing number of foreign worker claims. In order to adjudicate same, interpreters and translators become necessary to ensure a fair hearing and due process.

The attorneys of Reeves, Aiken and Hightower LLP have two full-time hispanic paralegals ready to help answer questions from foreign workers injured on-the-job here is SC. With over 22 years of workers’ compensation experience, 7 as an insurance defense attorney, Robert J. Reeves is a seasoned trial lawyer who has successfully represented almost every type of serious injury case. He is also a former intensive care unit Registered Nurse (RN) and understands complex injuries and the impact on you as well as your family. We welcome an opportunity to meet with you and personally review your situation. Please review our attorneys’ credentials at www.rjrlaw.com. Then, call us today at 877-374-5999 for a private consultation.

SCWCC Accepts Administrative Guidelines for Interpreters / Translators

At the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission’s recent regular business meeting, the SCWCC accepted administrative guidelines for the use of interpreters and translators in workers’ compensation proceedings. The guidelines are intended to ensure translators and interpreters render complete and accurate translation or interpretation without altering, omitting or adding anything to what is said or written by a witness. The guidelines are for administrative purposes only. It is not the intent of the Commission to propose the guidelines as a new regulation of statute.

The guidelines provide:

All parties must make a good faith effort to ensure any interpretations or translations are rendered completely and accurately.

A party obtaining the services of a translator or interpreter must make a good faith effort to obtain a translator or interpreter who possesses the necessary certifications, training and pertinent experience to render a complete and accurate translation.

The Commission presumes an interpreter or translator who is certified pursuant to the South Carolina Court Interpreter Certification Program possess the requisite certifications, training and pertinent experience; however, the Commission may permit the use of uncertified translators who possess sufficient training and/or experience. Translators and interpreters are expected to comply with Rule 511, S.C.A.C.R., Rules of Professional Conduct for Court Interpreters (2006).

A party obtaining a translator or interpreter must make a good faith effort to ensure the translator or interpreters is impartial, unbiased and refrains from conduct that may give the appearance of bias.

Translators and interpreters must disclose any real or perceived conflicts of interest.

After qualifications and conflicts of interest are disclosed, the parties may stipulate their consent to using the interpreter or translator’s services. If a party objects to the use of a translator or interpreter due to a perceived lack of qualifications or conflict of interest, the Commissioner will decide on a case-by-case base whether the proffered interpreter or translator is sufficient.

Interpreters and translators will be required to complete an affidavit certifying the above guidelines have been met.

Finally, to ensure conflicts are disclosed and all parties are provided notice of any perceived conflicts, the Commissioner will ask the following questions prior to the commencement of translation or interpretation, on the record and under oath:

Are you a friend, associate or relative of a party or counsel for a party in the proceedings?

Have you served in an investigative capacity for any party involved in the case?

Do you or your spouse or child have a financial interest in the subject matter in controversy or in a party to the proceeding, or any other interest that would be affected by the outcome of the case?

Have you been involved in the choice of counsel or law firm in this case?

Are you an attorney or an employee of an attorney in the case?

Have you previously been retained for private employment by one of the parties to interpret in the case?

Is there any other reason your independence of judgment would be compromised in the course of providing services in the case?

 

SC Workers’ Compensation Attorney – New Commissioner Appointed

Congratulations to Melody James on her recent appointment to the Commission. Although it has been almost 20 years, it was always a pleasure to work with Melody. Glad to see her doing so well. I look forward to appearing before her in hearings.

With over 22 years of workers’ compensation experience, attorney Robert J. Reeves of Reeves, Aiken and Hightower LLP has successfully handled every type of on-the-job injury, from broken bones to wrongful death. As a former intensive care unit  Registered Nurse (RN), he has actually treated patients with the same type of serious injuries he now represents in court. He understands the physical as well as emotional costs of an at work accident on you and your family. We would welcome an opportunity to meet with you and review your case. Please review our unique qualifications at our website www.rjrlaw.com. Then call us for a private consultation at 877-374-5999 today.

SC Governor Appoints Melody James to WC Commission

This morning, Governor Nikki Haley sent a press release annoucing a new appointment to the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission.  Here is the release.
Columbia, S.C. – Governor Nikki Haley today announced the appointment of Melody James to the South Carolina Workers’ Compensation Commission.
“We look for Workers’ Compensation Commissioners who will be fair – and not political – so that South Carolina can continue to be business-friendly and competitive, and that’s what we have found in Melody James,” said Gov. Haley. James serves as a Municipal Judge for the City of Cayce. James is also a partner at Mozingo & James Law Firm in Camden where she practices workers’ compensation defense litigation. A member of the S.C. Bar since 1987, James is a 1987 graduate of the University of South Carolina School of Law and earned a Bachelor of Science in Accounting in 1984 from USC. James’ appointment is subject to the approval of the South Carolina Senate. Just last week, the Senate approved Gov. Haley’s appointment of Gene McCaskill to the SCWCC.

SC DUI Attorney – Ignition Interlock Coming – For All of Us

The SC DUI Attorneys at Robert J. Reeves P.C. strongly support safe and responsible driving, of course. However, as lawyers and citizens, we are concerned about the continuing and ongoing erosion of our freedoms. The bad acts of a few should not force punishment for the rest of us. Ignition interlock devices have inherent flaws and are subject to false positive readings. In that event, you cannot get home or go to work. Additionally, the added costs of such a device is significant. Cars are already too expensive. Rather than requiring everyone to “prove” they are safe to drive, why don’t we hold those who are truly impaired accountable.

The clients we represent are good people who have been falsely accused of “drunk driving.” They went out to dinner with their spouse or had a beer with friends and ended up in jail for the night because they had “alcohol on their breath.” If you have been wrongfully charged with a SC DUI, take a look at our website www.rjrlaw.com. We welcome the opportunity to review your case. Compare our attorneys’ credentials to any other firm. Then, call us at 877-374-5999 for a private consultation.

 

After the Party, a Car That Takes Away Your Keys

By Joseph B. White

Friends don’t let friends drive drunk. In the future, your car could be that friend.

The technology exists to have a car refuse to start when it senses the driver has been drinking. But as Joseph White reports on Lunch Break, it’s very controversial.

Researchers working with the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are developing technology that could be built into a car’s dashboard or controls to check a driver’s blood-alcohol level and refuse to start if above the legal limit. The effort, which began in 2008, is officially known as the Driver Alcohol Detection System for Safety, or DADSS for short.

“We’ve made more progress, faster, than we expected,” says Rob Strassburger, vice president for vehicle safety at the alliance. Contributing to advances is national-security research aimed at developing remote sensors that can detect biological or other chemical agents. Also, researchers say that fingertip sensors used in hospitals to monitor blood-sugar levels and other physical indicators are useful in detecting blood-alcohol levels, too.

EYESROAD

In an effort to reach high-risk drivers, groups aiming to stop drunk driving often take cars involved in fatal crashes to schools. Shown here, a 2010 display at Sherwood High School in Sandy Spring, Md.

It sounds futuristic and it will likely be years—eight to 10 by Mr. Strassburger’s estimate—before cars and trucks with built-in blood-alcohol detectors are for sale. The next phase, additional years off, is a commercially produced vehicle with the technology to drive a tipsy owner home autonomously.

Whether drivers will be comfortable with cars that could potentially override their commands is another matter. Already, a restaurant group is lobbying against the technology.

The arguments for pursuing cars that can detect drunk drivers revolve around the stubborn persistence of alcohol as a factor in fatal car crashes. In 1982, about 49% of drivers killed in car wrecks had blood-alcohol levels of 0.08 or higher. By 1994, that percentage had dropped to about 33%, where it has since plateaued, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety found in a study of federal data from 1982 to 2010.

Technology to disable a car if the driver is intoxicated already exists, but it is currently used primarily as a punitive measure for people caught with blood-alcohol levels over the legal limit.

EYESROAD

About 16 states now require people convicted of driving with blood-alcohol levels over the 0.08 legal limit to install so-called alcohol interlocks in their vehicles. These clunky systems require drivers to blow into a tube to verify that they are sober before the car can start. Nobody in the auto industry is proposing to offer such systems as factory-installed equipment. Instead, sensors would be unobtrusive, perhaps embedded in a starter button or a shift lever.

Enthusiasm for the potential of alcohol-detection technology is reflected in a proposed federal transportation bill. In it is a measure that would give the NHTSA’s alcohol-detector program $24 million over two years—a sum that could allow the agency by 2013 to equip a fleet of 100 or more cars with prototypes of two types of alcohol detectors. One would measure the alcohol in the driver’s breath. The other would use touch technology to take a reading from the driver’s skin, likely the fingertip used to activate a starter button.

The counter argument, at this early stage, is coming most loudly from the organization that represents the restaurant industry in Washington, D.C. “It is going to create a zero tolerance environment,” says Sarah Longwell, managing director of the American Beverage Institute.

EYESROAD-JUMP

Associated Press

BREATH TEST. About 16 states now require people convicted of driving with blood alcohol levels over the legal limit to install alcohol interlocks in their vehicles, like the one above. To use it, the driver blows into a tube to verify sobriety before the car can start. Researchers are developing prototypes of two built-in systems. One would measure the alcohol in the driver’s breath. The other would take a reading from the driver’s skin, likely the fingertip.

“We believe there’s nothing unsafe or illegal about having a glass of wine with dinner and driving home,” Ms. Longwell says. Her group’s concern is that onboard alcohol detectors will have to be calibrated to shut down the car at levels well below 0.08, to avoid the liability risk of a driver getting in the car at just below the limit, and then exceeding the limit during the drive home as the last drink enters the bloodstream.

In a Sept. 30, 2011, letter to the American Beverage Institute, the program manager for the alcohol-detection research program said the systems would not be set to prevent operation of the car at levels below 0.08, and would provide for a retest in the case a driver is locked out.

Ultimately, the future of onboard alcohol detectors will come down to convenience and culture.

NHTSA officials have said they have no plans to mandate onboard alcohol-detection systems in cars. The agency got a black eye in the 1970s when it mandated the installation of so-called seat belt interlocks that made it impossible to start a car until the driver fastened the seat belt. The uproar from consumers moved Congress to pass legislation forbidding seat-belt interlocks that stands to this day.

Still, the alcohol-detection system is a further example of how technology promises to change the relationship people have with their automobiles. If auto makers and safety regulators do attempt to encourage adoption of these systems, they’ll need to design them so that consumers don’t just want to rip them out. It could be that the first factory-installed alcohol interlocks are ordered by corporate or rental-fleet operators—who can make acceptance of the technology a condition of using the vehicle.

“We have to develop a technology that lives in a car for 20 years and works flawlessly,” Mr. Strassburger says. “That’s a pretty high bar.”