|
Drunk Driving
Cases
Attorney William C. Head
Case 29
State v. V.D.K.
Cobb County State Court
On April 4, 2003, V.D.K. was
driving along a rainy Sandy Plains Road on her way home from having a
few after dinner drinks with a fellow employee when she lost control of
her 2001 Toyota in the rain. When another car veered into her lane, her
car careened off the guardrail to the right, hydroplaned to the left across
the grass median and ended up with the front end against a concrete retaining
wall. It was about 7:30 PM when the police were called to the scene of
the accident.
V.D.K. had flagged down a passing
motorist for help. This woman took her home, a distance of a couple of
miles.
The arresting officer came
to the accident location and found that the driver had departed. He gave
police dispatch the tag number of the wrecked vehicle, and the police
dispatched a second officer to her home. There, the officer found V.D.K.
walking around from the back yard of her home to the front door of her
home. He asked her if she had been involved in a wreck. She said she had.
He then told her she needed to come back to the scene with him. She went
back to the scene, at his insistence.
The first officer attempted
to get her to perform some field sobriety tests, which she declined, based
on advice she had received from her attorney for her last DUI arrest.
The officer arrested her despite the fact that she did not field evaluations.
The officer then read her the Georgia implied consent advisements. She
stated that she wanted a blood test. The officer asked for blood and urine,
which she agreed to take. She was then taken to Cobb County jail, where
she was later able to post bond and be released.
The blood test came back from
the GBI several months later as a 0.23 BAC. The legal standard was 0.08
at the time of her arrest.
V.D.K.'s two prior DUI offenses
within 5 years meant that a guilty plea or a trial loss would take away
her driver's license for 5 years. Mr. Head advised her to elect a bench
trial. V.D.K. did not testify.
On September 18th, 2003, she
was found not guilty by the trial judge when Mr. Head was able to block
the blood test results from being admitted due to a flaw in the chain
of custody. She was found guilty of leaving the scene of an accident involving
property damage and fined by the judge and placed on probation. She served
no additional jail time at all, despite an original recommendation by
the prosecutor of "work release" jail time of 12 months.
You can read
other cases by clicking below:
|