as for darwins post about DUI laws having to be stricter. not really.
you simply(and you need to realize this craig) cannot 'stop drunk drivers' from doing it.
If a police officer sees you walking out of the store, pull a bottle of booze out from your jacket, brand new with the store's price tag still on it, the clerk says you didn't buy it, and your story is that you bought it a week ago and paid cash and don't have a recript and just happened to be carrying it in your coat when you went in and out of the store, there's no proof you stole it. Your story might e right. But you are very likely going to be arrested for shoplifting because of the odds. Do you disagree with that? Or are you inconsistent and dont really stand by the 'you have to have PROOF (no pun on the booze)' standard?
If a police officer sees you walking out of the store, pull a bottle of booze out from your jacket, brand new with the store's price tag still on it, the clerk says you didn't buy it, and your story is that you bought it a week ago and paid cash and don't have a recript and just happened to be carrying it in your coat when you went in and out of the store, there's no proof you stole it. Your story might e right. But you are very likely going to be arrested for shoplifting because of the odds. Do you disagree with that? Or are you inconsistent and dont really stand by the 'you have to have PROOF (no pun on the booze)' standard?
This. A drunk thinks "I'm drunk. I have nowhere to go but my car. If I sleep it off here, a cop will surely come see why my car is here so long and I'll get a DUI. So the logical thing to do is to drive myself to a place of safety."Ironically, rulings like this will only increase the number of drunks on the road. If they are going to get a DUI for sleeping it off in their cars, they may as well risk driving home. Punishing people for what they might have done always just encourages people to go ahead and do it.
answers in bold in post.
Also, selected text from the court opinion.
The last paragraph is important, they found him guilty because he could make the vehicle dangerous. Craig, you are usually better than this, the state just convicted a man because he could have driven drunk. Even the court states that the Jury cannot infer that he drove the vehicle.
I totally agree with the interpretation of the DUI law that allows them to charge someone drunk in a ditch behind the wheel of the car. However, if you're at your place of residence and sleeping in a car that not only has a cold engine but won't start, then that's a bit of a stretch.
I don't disagree with your story, but I don't think it's the same as this situation.
If a police officer sees you walking out of the store, pull a bottle of booze out from your jacket, brand new with the store's price tag still on it, the clerk says you didn't buy it, and your story is that you bought it a week ago and paid cash and don't have a recript and just happened to be carrying it in your coat when you went in and out of the store, there's no proof you stole it. Your story might e right. But you are very likely going to be arrested for shoplifting because of the odds. Do you disagree with that? Or are you inconsistent and dont really stand by the 'you have to have PROOF (no pun on the booze)' standard?
I can't read the .pdf, but I have seen the statue and other info in posts on sites lke The Smoking Dope (on which about half the people seemed to support the conviction).
There are a couple of issues. One is the 'what's the right law' issue, and another is the fact that the law does define DUI as both driving and 'being in physical control of a vehicle'.
I'm more interested in what the law should be, and I've laid out the laws that I think make sense, balancing the need between prohibiting drunk driving and not excessively infringing on rights.
My opinion is somewhat more lenient than the law in Minnesota it seems, for example, they list no exemption for 'sleeping it off' in your car at the bar.
Both seem to allow for affirmitive defenses that the person did not drive the car while intoxicated.
The facts in this case don't seem to have been clearly listed. A resident saw the man's car with the door open and the lights on parked, and called the police to investigate. They found the man asleep in the car with a number of empty beer cans in the car. THe man gave them at least a couple conflicting explanations for why he was in the car drunk, none of which made sense. One was that he'd 'just come down to the car to get an item and fell asleep' (and could show no item). Another was that he'd left his air conditioned apartment because he just felt like sitting in his car (drunk).
Now, what's a reasonable inference here? How well do the facts fit with his having driven home, drinkng and so drunk that while he parked, he passed out after opening the door, the lights still on, beer cans still sitting next to him? Is there any other "reasonable" scenario for the facts listed? On the 'not drivable', first, he thought the cdar was frivable, and told the officers that; it probably WAS, if it was a disabled car, it'd be likely he'd know that; and the 'wouldn't start' was threee weeks later without being driven, like the battery was run down for all we know.
When we get into the specifics this much, the broader issue is easy to forget, to cover all the possible variations.
In short the law does include choosing to be in control of a motor vehicle while drunk a crime, because that's where they draw the line between protecting legitimate freedoms and the practicality to enforcing drunk driving - which I think should err more towards not convicting the innocent. Some here are arguing against a more extreme and made up standard - that I don't support and isn't the law.
They talk about 'thought crime' - hardly. If you are sitting at your home, drunk, the car keys in your pocket, the car outside, and you have a 'thought crime' of drunk driving, you are complaining that's unfair to convict you, but no one is suggesting you shoule be and no law says you could be, even though you 'could easily do so'. So much for the 'possible' hyperbole.
Sometimes the law does go too far. We've had some scnearios listed where it did, like the woman whose son was getting help. IMO this one seems reasonable. By the way, all twelve jurors agreed.
Your on a ps3 so you can't read the PDF, but please read the parts I quoted. Two important points, A, this is not a case where the jury can infer that the defendant drove the car, the judges clearly state this.
B. However, even though he could not be proven or inferred to have driven the vehicle, he was guilty of a DUI because "he could, without too much difficulty, make the vehicle a source of danger." The operative word in this statement is could. The court states that it cannot be inferred or proven that he drove the car, even the police did not believe the car had been driven. This is not even a thought crime, in a thought crime they at least are convicting you of intent, they are convicting him of driving drunk when they do not believe the vehicle in question was ever driven on the night of the incident.
Another wrinkle: Does this also mean that if I leave my 14-year-old in the car for a minute or two while I run into a store to grab some milk, with the engine running, because it's -10F outside, that he can be convicted of driving without a license while I'm inside?
What is the plausible reason he's passed out drunk in his car at his house for which there's no affirmative defense why?
He went to grab something out of his car and passed out. I think that's a plausible reason. I forget stuff in my car all the time and go out to get it. I also need these things called keys to get into the car even though I'm not going to use said keys to drive the car.
Not so plausible when they asked him what item and he had none, and contradicted his own story.
It's not that big a rule: if you get drunk, don't go get in your car and fall asleep. With the lights on.
In the real world, if you are drunk and want something from the car, and you can't wait, and you can't get someone to get if for you, the seconds you spend to go get the item aren't going to get you arrested.
It's a small price to pay for the benefits, as is not driving with an open container. Your car is off limits while drunk, if it's parked in a public area the police might patrol.
Your car is off limits while drunk, if it's parked in a public area the police might patrol.
like I mentioned before, the neighboring states around LA, dont have open container, have more DUI arrests per citizen. Please stop using open container as an example of laws that prevent DUI's till you have evidence to prove it.
http://www.1800duilaws.com/forms/duiarrest.asp
while the # of arrests isnt a best indicator its all we have.
I'm sorry but even if he went in there to drive, he didnt drive. so he shouldnt get arrested for driving under the influence
1. No, because I'm not using it for that. I'm using it for other things, its use as an example of a law we accept as *believing to be* with a safety benefit without direct evidence of the underlying crime.
2. You can say drinving with all the bolding and italics you like, but because of the reasons stated, the actual statue specifically prohibtis being in control of the vehicle as well. It's not only driving for a good reason.
and I am saying that open container laws are another example of BS laws that solve basically no problems. People are OK with it because its been on the books for so long. You can beat people hollered when it was taken away.
A few weeks after Fleck's vehicle was impounded, a police officer tested the vehicle using the keys found in the car's center console.
"Although the key turned in the ignition, the vehicle would not start," Justice Alan C. Page explained in the unanimous decision.
Maybe. It's not the only misguided law we have if so. People still wrongly think capital punishment is an effective deterrent. The public argues whether no gun-laws or mandatory gun-laws make it safer.
Sleeping in a car is not probable cause for an investigation. I've had the police knock on my window while I was sleeping in the car. I opened my eyes, squinted, glared, and went back to sleep. What are they going to do, knock my window out because I'm asleep?
If a police officer sees you walking out of the store, pull a bottle of booze out from your jacket, brand new with the store's price tag still on it, the clerk says you didn't buy it, and your story is that you bought it a week ago and paid cash and don't have a recript and just happened to be carrying it in your coat when you went in and out of the store, there's no proof you stole it. Your story might e right. But you are very likely going to be arrested for shoplifting because of the odds. Do you disagree with that? Or are you inconsistent and dont really stand by the 'you have to have PROOF (no pun on the booze)' standard?