The Five Don'ts
Don’t Let the Police into your Home
In many cases a citizen is awakened in the middle of the night
by a knock on the door. A police officer stands there and tells
you that so-and-so saw you driving earlier and you seemed impaired.
You do not have to open the door. The officer cannot enter your
home without a search warrant unless you consent to his entry. Don’t
do it.
Don’t Answer Any Questions
Insist on your right to remain silent. However, providing your
name and address is recommended, as is giving your driver’s
license if you’re stopped in a car.
You do not have to admit you were drinking or tell the officer
how much you drank.

You have heard it a thousand times. "Anything you say can
and will be used against you." And no matter what you say,
the officer (and later, the prosecutor) will be able to find a way
to use it against you.
Even if you are drinking sober, it is unlikely you will help yourself
by answering questions.
Resist the natural urge to help the officer build a case against
you.
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Don’t Do any "Field
Sobriety Tests"
You do not have to do any of these roadside exercises. Most of
them have nothing whatsoever to do with your level of intoxication
or your BAC. Most of them are designed to make you look bad in front
of a jury, and they will.
The tests score you on things you aren’t told will be scored
and insist you do other things that aren’t scored. You will
not get a chance to practice, and if you do, you will be penalized.
Even the three tests that have scientific validity are wrong up
to 35% of the time, and that’s assuming the officers administered
them properly.
The ability of police officers properly to administer the three
standardized field sobriety tests varies significantly from agency
to agency and within agencies.
Even with a good DUI attorney who knows how to cross-examine on
the SFSTs, the jury will hear the opinion of the nice officer who
protects their safety that you “failed” the tests.
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Don’t Take any Preliminary
Breath Tests
You do not have to give the officer a breath sample in any preliminary
machine. Usually the officer will tell you something like “If
you blow in here and you pass, I will let you go.”
These PBTs or PAS machines are portable, handheld devices of questionable
reliability. They are not regulated by California’s Title
17 rules, so there is no telling how accurate any one of them may
be.
NOTE: California’s implied consent laws do require you to
take an evidential test (either blood, breath or urine). Santa Barbara
police agencies are now using an evidential breath testing machine
called an EPAS that is portable and looks like a preliminary test
machine. DON’T BE FOOLED. If you refuse to take an evidential
test, DMV will take automatic action against your license, and your
sentence will be increased if you are convicted of DUI.
If you decide you will take the test required by the implied consent
laws, ask for a urine test. When the officer tells you it is not
available (which usually happens), ask to take an evidential breath
test. DO NOT AGREE to take any preliminary breath test.
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Don't Talk to Anyone In the Jail
Police can eavesdrop on any conversation you have except one with
your attorney. If you make a phone call to a friend or spouse, you
have to assume the police are listening.
That other guy in the jail who was arrested for DUI may well be
a snitch or an undercover officer. Don't fall for it.
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