Close

Articles Posted in DWI Law and Legislation

Updated:

NJ Drunk Driving Update: Before a DWI Conviction, Prosecutors Must Prove Guilt — Part 1

As stated previously in this forum, drunken driving is a serious offense with severe penalties for those convicted of DWI, breath test refusal or driving under the influence of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS); however, no conviction and no sentencing for driving while intoxicated can even take place until the…

Updated:

Bergen County DWI Update: Drunken Driving Conviction Can Lead to Revoked NJ Driver’s License

If there is one thing that most people need to live and work in our modern age, outside of food and lodging, it might be a valid driver’s license. From the day we receive our learner’s permit — and later a full-fledged license — we begin to value the freedom…

Updated:

New Jersey Drunken Driving Defense Update: Driver’s License Suspension Possible following DWI or DUI Conviction

It’s not surprising, with all the anti-drunken driving campaigns that target potentially impaired Garden State motorists every year, that New Jersey law enforcement agencies and our court system hold little love for drivers convicted of DWI or drug DUI. While use of illicit drugs, such as cocaine and marijuana, by…

Updated:

Middlesex County DWI Update: A Look at Penalties following a New Jersey Drunken Driving Conviction

We recently discussed the seriousness of a teenager’s conviction for underage DWI. While every parent faced with this type of situation should be rightly concerned, there are other areas of drunken driving defense law that one should also be cognizant of, such as the penalties and fines that adults can…

Updated:

Monmouth, NJ, Drunk Driving Update: New Jersey Marijuana Use or Possession Charges can be Serious

For anyone who has ever been stopped by police here in the Garden State for drunken driving, impaired driving due to prescription medication (aka drug DUI), or operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS), you know that the potential consequences could be harsh…

Updated:

In-car Cellphone Use…the Newest Version of Driving While Intoxicated in New Jersey?

Back in the early- to mid-20th Century, drinking and driving was at best looked at as a potential for embarrassing run-ins with the police; or something to laugh at in a motion picture comedy. At worst, it could land a person in the “drunk tank” for a day or two…

Updated:

Mercer County Legal Defense News: NJ Appeals Court Rules Probable Cause Not Required for Sobriety Testing

As many people already understand, when it comes to being arrested for drunken driving in the Garden State, an officer typically will have stopped the accused on the basis of a moving violation or some other traffic or motor vehicle offense. As New Jersey DWI defense attorneys, we get questions…

Updated:

NJ Legal Defense News: Penn. State Supreme Court Overturns Challenge to Ignition Interlock Law

In many states, the Garden State included, ignition interlocks can be ordered installed in vehicles used by convicted drunken driving offenders as a way of keeping intoxicated drivers off the road. While some people oppose these types of laws, traffic safety and anti-drunk driving supporters maintain that mandatory ignition interlocks…

Updated:

No DWI Charges Yet for New Jersey Man Involved in Fatal Ocean County Traffic Accident

Being caught driving drunk here in the Garden State can get many a motorist in hot water legally and financially; and it’s no secret that police departments in Monmouth, Bergen, Sussex and Atlantic counties have virtually no tolerance for drivers who get behind the wheel in any state of inebriation.…

Updated:

Warren County DWI News: Is Smelling for Alcohol on a New Jersey Motorist a “Police Interrogation”?

As anyone who has ever been arrested or even convicted of driving while intoxicated will likely know that many times a police officer will testify he detected the odor of alcohol on the motorist’s breath prior to a drunk driving arrest. While this statement is usually not enough to convict…

Contact Us