California DUI Breath Test Defenses
- Insufficient or broken observation period -no continuous observation for entire 15 minutes before first breath sample (e.g. Officer attempts to include transportation time as part of required observation period, goes to his trunk and/or walks around before removing you from police car, or you were left alone at anytime prior to taking the test -e.g. used restroom or telephone or placed in holding cell/room).
- During those 15 minutes before the test, you burp, belch or have slight regurgitation of gas that is relatively quiet.
- Vomiting, belching within 15 minutes of test - no rinsing of mouth, or inadequate deprivation period before retest.
- You may not be a proper subject for breath testing. You have a physical problem or health limitation:
- gastric reflux, hiatal hernia or intestinal problem (e.g. Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disease, Irritated Bowel Syndrome, or Acid Reflux Syndrome) diagnosed and treated before date of arrest;
- dental condition (e.g. gum disease/gingivitis/pockets around roots, dentures or bridgework which may trap mouth alcohol and contaminate a breath machine sample); or
- respiratory problem (e.g. asthma, bronchitis, emphysema or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease).
- Your behavior or actions do not match test results (e.g. shown by independent witnesses).
- The breath test room or circuitry has a problem (e.g. Radio Frequency Interference from a cell phone, officer's radio, copy machine or other equipment with surge capabilities) which may cause machine to give artificially high reading; smoking in or near machine; shared power supply with heater or other appliance - must be dedicated "clean" electrical source; or recently painted walls or trim).
- You have had recent environmental exposure to volatile fumes (lacquer, gasoline, paint, dry cleaning fluids or even 409) which have cumulative reading, causing chemical interference/falsely elevated result.
- Air bag defenses - "the Tyndall effecf' - diffusion of light; propellant exposure; cut lips; lung and airway irritation & fluid build-up from caustic gas propellant.
- Video tape refutes the high reading, supports sobriety.
- High test result, yet you never urinate for 3 to 4 hours or more - physiological impossibility.
- Unintentional alcohol (e.g. from Nyquil, Vicks Formula 44, lip balms, toothache drops).
- Something in mouth containing alcohol (e.g. Breath Drops with SD alcohol).
- Something in mouth that contains interfering or contaminating substance (e.g. Skoal snuff - wintergreen; Altoids curiously strong mints).
- Improper or out of agreement tests, without follow-up tests to correct [both results must be within 0.02% of each other].
- Officer refuses to permit your request for a second, independent test. Denial of blood test - the more reliable target with the more accurate method of analysis.
- Officer not trained or marginally trained in accordance with the standards of Title 17 of the California Code of Regulations (e.g. not trained in theory of operation of machine).
- Officer fails to follow manual or training protocol.
- Inadequate inspections by machine inspectors (e.g. no linearity proven).
- Police report supports sobriety, or lack of investigation of alternative causes.
- Rising blood alcohol level showing time of driving BAC would have been lower than time of testing.
- Elevated breath temperature (e.g. caused by fever, hot tub, sauna, detention in hot sun or back of patrol car in summer, dancing, menstrual cycle, etc.)
- Breath/blood ratio (2100:1) not proven to be your ratio; show how minor error gets multiplied 2100 times; 0.12 = 17/10,000,000th of an ounce. Show you have abnormally low blood/breath conversion ratio through testing and expert.
- Inherent sampling variability or margin of error (e.g., 0.088 reading - state acknowledges +/- 0.01% precision problem).
- You have blowing pattern irregularity (e.g. blubbering and crying causing artificially high water vapor problem).
- You have been on strict high protein diet and then introduce carbohydrates, thereby triggering auto-generated alcohol production when ketones are converted to isopropyl alcohol (or the "auto-brewery" syndrome).
- You have diabetes, are borderline diabetic or are hypoglycemic and consume alcohol in any amount, causing conversion of high acetone levels into isopropyl alcohol.
- Breath test operator gets first BAC results, which will not support a .08% per se case, then waits a few more minutes and retests, obtaining a reading above the per se limit.
- Officer gives chemical test admonition, but then goes too far by threatening dire warnings for which there is no factual basis or misstates consequences regarding possible license suspension.
- State fails to prove that results were obtained within the 3 hour statutorily imposed time (3 hours after driving ended) in order to invoke rebuttable presumption that your BAC was at or over the limit at time of driving.
- You can prove sufficient alcohol was consumed during driving, after driving ended or before police arrived.
- Officer gets fired, indicted, retires, moves away, or dies.
- In handling case, officer commits crime (e.g., obstruction of justice or perjury) in an effort to conceal evidence; state cannot proceed, or more often makes an illegal, warrantless stop or arrests you without probable cause.
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