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originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: intrptr
This went on till he had to exhale and they got their reading. I was dumbfounded witnessing that.
The story doesn't make sense. Are you claiming they held his nose?
A breathalizer requires a sustained, steady exhalation through the mouth.
If that actually happened it should have been recorded, and sent to court as a lawsuit.
originally posted by: Vector99
a reply to: intrptr
They did it to mess with the person then. A simple breath into a breathalyzer won't produce results. You have to blow constantly and hard into the tube for it to work.
originally posted by: Snarl
On Friday, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled the state’s DUI testing refusal law unconstitutional, setting a remarkable precedent concerning forced testing of those suspected of driving under the influence.
In a 6-1 ruling, the court decided the state’s law, which had made it a crime to refuse breathalyzer or blood alcohol tests without a court-ordered warrant, is excessive punishment
Maryland alcohol education program. Those tests, the court found, amounted to searches, and the Kansas law “punishes people for exercising their constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures,”
Might be a bit of controversy in this. I won't take a drink and drive. I try to not even have my car keys in my pocket if alcohol is part of the equation. The worst thing I ever got a ticket for was speeding and I've never even been pulled for suspicion of DUI.
I don't 'act like this' because I've ever worried about becoming a hazardous road condition. I 'act like this' because the penalties for Driving Under the Influence are so draconian. Anyone else here remember the time when DUI wasn't an acronym anyone had ever heard of before? People have been arrested for Drunk Driving for a really long time, but it was that little push by an organization calling itself MADD that gave the movement legs ... and ensured a mostly permanent loss of Liberty for people in this country.
There's nothing at all wrong with having a couple of drinks and driving home. The problem was we gave 'em and inch ... and they took a mile.
Anyway, I see this as a step back in the right direction. I personally hope to see this spread from state to state.
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: Phage
In my state it is not a criminal offense to refuse a sobriety test but you will have your license suspended.
I personally witnessed someone begin held down and a breathalyzer held to their mouth. The subject refused to breathe and they kept saying, "its okay, you're okay, you're doing fine, keep holding your breath as long as possible…"
This went on till he had to exhale and they got their reading. I was dumbfounded witnessing that.
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: Snarl
Doesn't refusing a breathalyzer just result in you being taken to the police station where they do a full test there anyways? That's what happens in Maryland at least. You aren't technically under arrest, but are detained. Sure I guess that is time to sober up a bit, but most aren't. I see that law as excessive if that was how it works in Kansas.
Edit: wow this is an old thread.