Articles Posted in Drug DWI

As Morris County drunk driving defense attorneys, my office represents motorists charged with DWI and drug DUI offenses. Incidents of driving under the influence of either alcohol or drugs, whether prescription or illegal substances such as marijuana, occur with relative frequency all across New Jersey.

Examples of arrests for driving while intoxicated can be found in the news almost every day. The following reports are just a sampling of the kinds of DWI and DUI traffic stops that happen on the roads throughout the Garden State. Regardless of the circumstances, it is always important to contact an experienced DWI defense lawyer to understand your options.

Early in the morning on a Thursday a 21-year-old driver was stopped by police for a motor vehicle violation. The incident quickly developed into a case of possession of drug paraphernalia. According to reports, the Bayonne, NJ, man was stopped for speeding. During the traffic stop the officer in charge determined that the motorist had some drug paraphernalia in the car. The man was taken to police headquarters for processing. He was subsequently released with a summons for speeding and a pending court date.

Like many New Jersey counties, Essex is the recipient of federal funds to cover the cost of traffic enforcement, including increased drunken driving patrols, sobriety checkpoints and other DWI-related policing efforts. As a New Jersey drunk driving defense attorney, I know that not every DWI or prescription drug DUI arrest results in a conviction.

As Essex County DWI lawyers, I and my colleagues understand the law and have years of experience in areas such as field sobriety testing, Alcotest and blood-alcohol testing equipment, as well as municipal and state court procedures. As a former municipal prosecutor myself, I know the kinds of techniques and strategies employed by the state to gain a conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol and prescription medications.

Police can arrest a motorist for being legally drunk on beer and wine, but arrests and summonses are also processed for drivers who are suspected of being impaired due to marijuana, cocaine and other controlled dangerous substances (CDS).

Howell
A 25-year-old Point Pleasant resident was pulled over on Route 9 by police for an unknown traffic violation. In the course of the traffic stop, officers noticed evidence of marijuana either on the woman’s person or in the vehicle. The driver was charged with possession of less than 50 grams of marijuana, as well as having drug paraphernalia. She was also charged with operating a motor vehicle in possession of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS).

Tinton Falls
Two 19-year-olds from Ocean Township were arrested by police following a chain of events that included a single-car motor vehicle accident on Route 18 in Tinton Falls. According to police reports, one of the teens was driving a car that struck a guardrail. The other teen apparently took the wheel and drove the damaged vehicle away from the scene of the crash, however it broke down on Shafto Road near West Park Ave. The boys called 911 to report the disabled car. When police arrived, officers found a small amount of marijuana in the vehicle. It was determined it belonged to the young man who initially crashed the car. Both teens were arrested and charged with drunken driving. They were processed and released pending a court date.

A 19-year-old woman Ocean County woman was pulled by patrolmen over for what was likely a routine traffic violation. During the police stop officers apparently observed evidence of marijuana on the suspect’s person. She was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana in a motor vehicle. Officers processed the woman and subsequently released her pending a court date.

A 21-year-old Freehold man and a 35-year-old Red Bank woman were arrested in separate locations on the same day, both for driving under the influence of alcohol. The man was pulled over by police for an apparent routine traffic stop on Route 33, while the female driver was stopped along Sycamore Avenue in Tinton Falls. The woman was processed and released pending her day in court.

Wall
In less than a two-week period, nearly a dozen drivers were stopped for various traffic offenses that then ended up with drunken driving arrests. According to news reports, a 21-year-old man from New Egypt was pulled over on Route 138 for DWI; a 49-year-old Long Branch man was stopped and charged with DWI; an 18-year-old Asbury Park youth was stopped along Route 35 and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol.

A 19-year-old out-of-state man was stopped along Belmar Boulevard and arrested for DWI; A 21-year-old Cranbury resident was stopped along Woodfield Avenue by police before being charged with possession of a prescription drug without a prescription; A 48-year-old Freehold man stopped along Route 35 for allegedly driving drunk.
Continue reading

It may seem that bad things happen in groups, but this is probably just the law of averages in action. Still, the police in Passaic County had their hands full not long ago when more than a half-dozen motorists were arrested for drunken driving in less than three days in the Clifton, NJ, area.

As New Jersey DWI attorneys working in Passaic, Ocean, Bergen and other counties around the state, we know that this is just business as usual for local law enforcement. It must be remembered that not every drunken driving arrest results in a conviction. The penalties for multiple DWI or drug DUI convictions can be quite stiff, so it makes sense to contact a qualified drunk driving defense lawyer to discuss your particular situation. Here are some examples:

Hit-and-Run Accident
A 72-year-old Clifton man was arrested and charged with DWI on a Thursday evening when, according to reports, police responded to a hit-and-run accident on St. Andrew’s Boulevard. The officers detected signs of drunkenness when the questioned the elderly gentleman. Giving him several field sobriety tests to perform, which he could not, the officers arrested and took him into custody. He was charged with DWI after having his blood-alcohol content (BAC) recorded at 0.10 percent. Police also charged the man with leaving the scene of a motor vehicle accident.

Asleep in a Running VehicleThe next morning, just before 2am, police observed a driver asleep in his ’05 Nissan Altima near the intersection of Van Winkle and Highland Avenue. Approaching the car, officers saw that the keys were still in the ignition and they could hear the engine running. Police awakened the 32-year-old Passaic resident to question him, during which they reportedly detected signs of alcoholic intoxication. The man allegedly failed several field sobriety tests, after which the officers arrested him and took him to headquarters. After registering a BAC of 0.10, he was charged with DWI.
Continue reading

Taking the wheel of a car or truck while intoxicated is never advisable, though many people do drive after drinking a beer, a glass of wine or shot of tequila. After doing so, the odds of getting pulled over can often go up many fold. As a New Jersey DWI defense attorney and former prosecuting attorney for municipalities in the state, I understand how drivers in the Garden State can get arrested for and charged with drunk driving by local or state police.

Knowing that you can be arrested for driving while intoxicated is fine for starters, but there are a number of other parts of the drunken driving arrest and conviction process that one should be familiar with. Naturally, impaired driving either through the consumption of alcohol or the use of prescription medication (drug DUI) is something that every drive should avoid for their own safety, if not for others.

As Ocean, Monmouth, Bergen and Union County drunk driving defense attorneys, we hope that the following pointers may be of some use to individuals currently facing DWI or DUI charges. Understanding these may help other New Jersey motorists avoid the pitfalls and legal troubles of being arrested or convicted of drunken driving. The process begins, simply enough, with a driver being stopped for a routine traffic violation, but it can quickly escalate to include taking a field sobriety test and then an Alcotest, or breathalyzer test.

Whether a driver is ultimately charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, drug DUI, or breath test refusal, will have much to do with the particular circumstances of the traffic stop and the driver’s level of inebriation.

Many might ponder under what circumstances a New Jersey police officer will likely stop them for drunken driving. Although an officer may not be aware at first that a motorist is, in fact, impaired by alcohol or prescription meds, he may decide to pull a driver over for any number of possible traffic violations.
Continue reading

With so many drivers on the road it’s no surprise that drunken driving arrests occur every day all across the Garden State. As a New Jersey DWI defense attorney with offices throughout the state, I’ve dealt with a wide variety of motorists who have been charged with drunken driving or prescription drug DUI. Our Bergen County drunk driving defense lawyers have the experience to handle cases not unlike the ones reported below.

Lyndhurst

According to news articles, a car was pulled over as part of an early morning traffic stop which looked like a case of CDS possession and possible drug DUI. Officers had apparently noticed that the man’s passenger was not wearing a seat belt just before 4am on a Monday. Based on the police report, the stop occurred at the corner of Jackson Plc. and Rutherford Ave. in Lyndhurst. While interviewing the two occupants, patrolmen observed that the 19-year-old passenger had a quantity of the prescription drug Xanax on his person. Determining that the man did not have a prescription for the medication, police charged him with possession of prescription drugs and failure to wear a seatbelt.

As a former New Jersey municipal prosecutor, I can respect the lengths to which our state and local municipalities go to reduce traffic fatalities. According to a new study released out of the nation’s capital, law enforcement agencies across the country have some good news to crow about: Highway deaths have dropped to their lowest levels in 60 years.

Of course, as a New Jersey drunken driving defense attorney and DUI lawyer, I know that many times the police just don’t have the evidence to prove that a motorist has been driving while intoxicated. There should always be a balance between public safety and individual rights, which is why I always tell people to fight what they believe to be a faulty arrest for driving under the influence of alcohol, Marijuana or prescription drugs.

According to a recent news article, New Jersey law enforcement officials have credited various enforcement technologies coupled with strict DWI and drug DUI patrols and checkpoints, among other techniques. The story coming out of Washington, D.C., indicates that deaths on our public roadways have drastically fallen to levels not experienced since the ’50s.

Whether you live in Red Bank or Newark, Atlantic City or Trenton, as a New Jersey motorist you always have the potential to be stopped for one of dozens of traffic violations by a the state police or of any of the hundreds of county and municipal law enforcement officers across the Garden State. In fact, every drunken driving or drug DUI conviction begins with an arrest, usually arising out of a routine traffic stop.

Most drivers should understand that for a DWI traffic stop to be valid it must be backed up by what state law defines as “reasonable suspicion” that the driver of a car, truck or other motor vehicle has actually committed a traffic violation. As New Jersey drunk driving defense attorneys, I and my staff of experienced DWI defense lawyers make it our job to assist individuals accused of DWI (also known as driving while intoxicated), prescription drug DUI, or even marijuana possession in a vehicle.

Initial Traffic Stop
In State v. Carpentieri, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that a patrolman must have an “articulable and reasonable suspicion” that a traffic law violation has been committed before he can even consider effecting a drunken driving traffic stop. Additionally, once a driver has been pulled over, state law says that the police officer must have probable cause before he can make an arrest and subsequently conduct a breathalyzer test. When we say probable cause, it means cause to believe that the motorist is in fact operating his or her vehicle in an intoxicated condition.

Please keep in mind that at no time during this early stage of a DWI arrest does a driver have the right to advice from counsel. Even an experienced DWI lawyer will be of absolutely no help at that particular point in time.

Arraignment
The second step following a DWI or DUI arrest, which can also include breath test refusal, is the arraignment of the subject. As part of this step, the motorist receives a Complaint. The defendant makes his initial appearance at arraignment where the court informs him of the charges. Simultaneously, the defendant is also told of his rights under New Jersey state law, after which he will enter a plea of guilty or not guilty.
Continue reading

LyndhurstA 56-year-old out-of-state woman was arrested and charged with DWI after she apparently left the scene of a minor accident. According to police reports, officers were called to the scene of a motor vehicle accident on a late Monday afternoon, from which one of the drivers had subsequently left. At nearly the same time, police received reports of an allegedly intoxicated person in a Quality Inn parking lot across the street from the accident. The woman was taken into custody and eventually released on summonses.

East Rutherford

A 21-year-old Weehawken, NJ, female resident was stopped by police after officers observed the driver make a U-turn along New Jersey’s Route 120 and in the process hit the center divider of the highway. After pulling over the suspect’s car police determined that the woman was apparently intoxicated. Officers noticed a plastic bag in the vehicle, which the driver eventually identified as containing marijuana. She also admitted to police that she had planned to sell the controlled dangerous substance (CDS). The woman was arrested and charged with multiple violations including possession of CDS under 50 grams and possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.

East Hanover, New JerseyA 35-year-old Elmwood Park woman was issued a summons for drunk driving as well as leaving the scene of an traffic accident after she reportedly hit another vehicle along Rt. 10 near the Algonquin Pkwy early last month. A Hanover police officer as well as several other patrolmen from East Hanover were called to the scene of the accident where the driver was arrested on the spot and taken to headquarters for a breathalyzer test. According to news reports, the woman refused to take a blood-alcohol content (BAC) test at the police department, after which she was issued additional summonses for refusal to submit to a breath test, careless driving, reckless

driving and failure to report a motor vehicle accident.

A Brooklyn, NJ, woman was arrested on charges of marijuana possession in a vehicle early on a Sunday morning. The patrolman at the scene saw the driver apparently smoking pot in a parked vehicle at Summerfield Suites. While undergoing processing at the headquarters, officers were alerted to the fact that the driver was also wanted on a $350 Alpine warrant for failing to appear on a previous motor vehicle charge. The driver posted bail after being charged with possession of marijuana and a motor vehicle summons for possessing a drug in a motor vehicle.

Contact Information