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Does a
person have a choice to refuse a required breath or blood test?
Yes! Our law
provides that where the implied consent law is applicable, the
person arrested for DWI may refuse to take the requested test.
Such a refusal, however, can result in the following penalties:
1.
suspension of your driving privileges for 90 days if this is
your first arrest for DWI.
2.
a 180 day suspension for a subsequent arrest if, in the
first arrest you refused to submit to testing or had an
alcohol concentration of .08 or greater,
3.
a one year license suspension if you have a prior conviction
for DWI; and,
4.
the admission into evidence of your refusal to take the
breath test in the subsequent DWI criminal trial. The
purpose of this admission, from the prosecution's viewpoint,
is to imply to the judge or jury, that the refusal was
premised on the belief that the driver thought he was too
intoxicated to pass the test.
If you do
submit to alcohol concentration testing and fail, your driver's
license privileges can be suspended, and the test result may
come into evidence in the criminal trial. The possible
suspension periods are as follows:
-
60 days
if your driving record shows no prior alcohol related
arrests,
-
120
days for two or more prior arrests without a conviction,
and
-
180
days if you have a prior conviction.
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