DUI Penalties
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Per Se vs. Impairment DUI Charges
At the Law Office of Erin Bradley McAleer, we understand that navigating DUI charges can be complex and stressful. One crucial aspect of DUI cases is understanding the difference between per se DUI and impairment…
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Understanding Washington State DUI Laws: What Constitutes Impairment?
Driving under the influence (DUI) is a serious offense in Washington State. At the Law Office of Erin Bradley McAleer, we aim to provide clear, reliable information to help you understand what constitutes impairment under…
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How Long Will a DUI Be on Your Record in Washington State?
If you’ve been convicted of a DUI (Driving Under the Influence) in Washington State, you’re likely concerned about how long this charge will stay on your record and impact your life. Understanding the implications of…
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Washington State DUI Laws Explained
In Washington State, as in all states across America, driving under the influence (DUI) of alcohol or drugs is illegal and carries severe consequences. Understanding the law, your rights, and the potential penalties associated with…
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Sentence Option Alternatives for DUI Offenders
Facing a DUI charge can be overwhelming, but there are alternatives to traditional jail time. Erin Bradley McAleer’s Law Office delves into the various options available for DUI offenders. Below we will discuss some alternative…
Washington DUI penalties – RCW 46.61.504
DUI is gross misdemeanor. This means the maximum punishment 364 days in jail and a $5000.00 fine. Upon conviction for Washington DUI, there are mandatory punishment penalties and the court must impose even for first time offenders with no prior DUI convictions. While the court ALWAYS retains the ability to impose more than the minimum, if you are convicted of DUI the court has no discretion when it comes to sentencing below the mandatory punishment set forth by statute.
If You Have a Prior DUI Offense
Under the sentencing scheme of Washington’s DUI law, the mandatory minimums are determined by whether you have “priors” within 7 years. The word “prior” is set by statute.
A “prior offense” means a conviction for any of the following:
- Driving Under the Influence (RCW 46.61.502)
- Physical Control (RCW 46.61.504)
- Vehicular Homicide committed while DUI (RCW 46.61.520)
- Vehicular Assault committed while DUI (RCW 46.61.522)
Deferred Prosecution Still Counts as a Prior
Many people who enter a deferred prosecution and successfully complete the program are unaware that this falls within the definition of prior offense also. In addition to the priors above, the statute includes a deferred prosecution if done when the charge is originally filed as a DUI or Physical Control and even if a Deferred was for Negligent Driving:
- First Degree when the charge was originally filed as a violation of DUI (RCW 46.61.502)
- Physical Control (RCW 46.61.504)
- Vehicular Homicide committed while DUI (RCW 46.61.520)
- Vehicular Assault committed while DUI (RCW 46.61.522)
In exercising its discretion in setting penalties within the mandatory minimums and maximum limits allowed, the court is required to “particularly consider” whether the person’s driving at the time of the offense was responsible for injury or damage to another or another’s property, and whether at the time of the offense the person was driving or in physical control of a vehicle with one or more passengers. As stated earlier, even though there may be no statutory reason for a judge to sentence above the mandatory minimums, they retain the discretion to impose more than the minimum and up to the maximum of 1 year and a 5000.00 fine.
Minimum DUI penalties
No Priors and Breath Test Under .15
If You Have No Prior DUI Related Convictions And A Breath Test Under .15 The Court MUST And WILL:
- Impose 24 consecutive hours of jail;
- Impose a fine and fees of $941.00;*
- Order the DOL to suspend your driver’s license for 90 days (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Order you to attend a DUI victim impact panel; and
- Place you on probation for at least 2 years, but most likely 5 years.
No Priors and Breath Test Over .15 (or Refusal)
If You Have No Prior DUI Related Convictions And A Breath Test Over .15 (Or You REFUSED) The Court MUST And Will:
- Impose 48 consecutive hours jail;
- Impose a fine and fees of $1196.00;
- Order the DOL to revoke your driver’s license for 365 days, or 2 years if you Refused, (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you apply install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Order you to attend a DUI victim impact panel; and
- Place you on probation for at least 2 years, but most likely 5 years. The cost of probation is at your expense.
One Prior and Breath Test Under .15
If You Have 1 Prior DUI Related Conviction And A Breath Test Under .15 The Court MUST And Will:
- Impose 30 days jail followed by 60 days of Electronic Home Monitoring, at your expense, after the jail is served (this EHM time MAY be converted to jail on a 15:1 ratio);
- Impose a fine and fees of $1196.00;
- Order the DOL to revoke your driver’s license for 2 years (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for at least 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests. If you have been previously ordered to install and IID, then it will be required for 5 years;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Place you on probation at your expense for at 5 years.
One Prior and Breath Test Above .15 (or Refusal)
If You Have 1 Prior DUI Related Conviction And A Breath Test Above .15 (Or You Refused) The Court MUST And Will:
- Impose 45 days jail followed by 90 days of Electronic Home Monitoring, at your expense, after the jail is served (EHM may be converted at a 15:1 ratio to jail);
- Impose a fine and fees of $1546.00;
- Order the DOL to revoke your driver’s license for 900 days, OR 3 years if you Refused, (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for at least 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests. If you have been previously ordered to install and IID, then it will be required for 5 years;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Place you on probation at your expense for at 5 years.
Two Priors and Breath Test Under .15
If You Have 2 Prior DUI Related Conviction And A Breath Test Under .15 The Court MUST And Will:
- Impose 90 days jail followed by 120 days of Electronic Home Monitoring, at your expense, after the jail is served (EHM may be converted at a 15:1 ratio to jail);
- Impose a fine and fees of $1970.00;
- Order the DOL to revoke your driver’s license for 3 years (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for at least 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests. If you have been previously ordered to install and IID, then it will be required for minimum 5 years, but for as long as 10 years;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Place you on probation at your expense for at 5 years.
Two Priors and Breath Test Above .15 (or Refusal)
If You Have 2 Prior DUI Related Conviction And A Breath Test Above .15 (Or You Refused) The Court MUST And Will:
- Impose 120 days jail followed by 150 days of Electronic Home Monitoring, at your expense, after the jail is served (EHM may be converted at a 15:1 ratio to jail);
- Impose a fine and fees of $2821.00;
- Order the DOL to revoke your driver’s license for 4 years, regardless of whether you refused, (if you suffered an administrative suspension from DOL prior to the conviction, you will be credited time) and when that period of time is over the DOL will only reinstate your driver’s license if you install an Ignition Interlock Device and maintain it for at least 1 year, and have at least the last 4 months of the 12 months with no failed tests. If you have been previously ordered to install and IID, then it will be required for minimum 5 years, but for as long as 10 years;
- Require you undergo a drug and alcohol evaluation and comply with any and all treatment recommendations;
- Place you on probation at your expense for at 5 years.
Additional DUI Sentence Terms & Punishment
In addition to the strict and specific terms outlined as a punishment for DUI, the court will order compliance with other conditions. In the event that those special terms or conditions are violated, there is additional MANDATORY punishment. The DUI Mandatory Sentence will require the court to impose the following additional conditions of sentence or probation:
- Not drive a motor vehicle without a valid license to drive, and proof of financial responsibility;
- Not drive a motor vehicle while having an alcohol concentration of .08 or more within two hours after driving; and
- Not refuse a test of breath or blood to determine alcohol concentration upon lawful request of a law enforcement officer.
For each and any violation of these 3 mandatory probation conditions, the court shall order the convicted person to be confined for 30 days, which shall not be suspended or deferred.
This means if you are on probation for a DUI and are convicted of new DUI penalties in Washington State where you were caught driving without a valid license, but provide a breath sample in the field, and then refuse at the station, you would be required to serve an additional 90 days in jail on top of whatever your sentence is for the new DUI conviction.
For each and every incident involving a violation of a mandatory condition of probation imposed, your license will be suspended or revoked by the court for 30 days and if it is already suspended or revoked at the time the of the probation violation, it shall be extended by 30 days. Under the above scenario, this means that there would be an additional 90 days added to your current suspension or revocation.
Special Penalty If You Have A Passenger Under 16
If you are convicted of a violation of DUI or Physical Control and there is evidence that there was a passenger under the age of sixteen in the vehicle, the court shall order a minimum fine of $1,000.00 for first offense, $2,000.00 for a second offense, and $3,000.00 for a third offense, AND the use of an Ignition Interlock Device(IID) for at least 6 months beyond the mandatory times set forth above regardless of number of priors.
However, prior to a conviction, upon being merely arrested for DUI with a child under age 16 the statute requires that: In every case where a person is arrested for a violation of DUI (RCW 46.61.502) or Physical Control (RCW 46.61.504), the law enforcement officer shall make a clear notation if a child under the age of sixteen was present in the vehicle. Furthermore, a law enforcement officer shall promptly notify child protective services whenever a child is present in a vehicle being driven by his or her parent, guardian, legal custodian, or sibling or half-sibling and that person is being arrested for a drug or alcohol-related driving offense.
The law does not require law enforcement to take custody of the child unless there is no other responsible person, or an agency having the right to physical custody of the child that can be contacted, or the officer has reasonable grounds to believe the child should be taken into custody.
An arrest in DUI penalties is scary enough, but if a child is in the car at the time of arrest, a routine DUI arrest becomes a parental nightmare.
DUI Penalties in Washington State | Expert DUI Lawyer
The Law Office of Erin Bradley McAleer will fight to ensure that you achieve the best possible outcome in your court case with your DUI penalties and charges. Call Erin Bradley McAleer – an expert dui lawyer in Vancouver, WA today at (360) 334-6277 to schedule an immediate confidential free consultation.
Washington Attorney Erin Bradley McAleer represents clients throughout Southwest Washington State, including in Clark County, Cowlitz County, and Skamania County and Vancouver, Battle Ground, Camas, La Center, Ridgefield, Washougal, Woodland, Yacolt, Castle Rock, Kalama, Kelso, Longview, North Bonneville, and Stevenson. Attorney Erin Bradley McAleer focuses on the areas of Criminal Defense, Traffic Infractions, Landlord Tenant, Personal Injury, Firearm Rights Restoration, and Post-Conviction Relief (Vacating & Sealing Criminal Records).