DRINK DRIVING LAWYERS GLASGOW

Have you been caught drink driving in Glasgow? Drink Driving has increasingly become a target of the Crown and Police Scotland.

Glasgow Drink Driving Lawyers & Solicitors


Campaigns strategically undertaken by the Police at key points in the calendar have given rise to greater public awareness over recent years. Greater social responsibility has kept the number of offenders down but some still fall foul of the law. Additionally, the law has changed in some important ways, reducing the level of alcohol permitted in the breath, blood or urine of a driver. Our Glasgow Road Traffic Lawyers can help with your drink driving case. 

 

THE LAW

Section 5(1)(a) Road Traffic Act 1988

It is an offence for a person to drive or attempt to drive a motor vehicle on a road or other public place after consuming so much alcohol that the proportion of it in their breath, blood or urine exceeds the prescribed limit.

Drink Driving, or Section 5(1)(b) offence applies to a person who is in charge of a motor vehicle and whose breath, blood or urine alcohol level exceeds the prescribed limit. It is a defence under Section 5 (1)(b) that there was no likelihood of driving at the time of the alleged offence.

(Section 4 offences include driving under the influence of drink or drugs, and carries with it the same penalty of disqualification).

Drink Driving is a serious offence and carries with it significant penalties.

  • There is a minimum period of 1 years disqualification.

  • If a second offence for drink driving occurs within 10 years, 3 years disqualification is the minimum period of disqualification.

  • Failure to provide a specimen of breath at a police office carries the same minimum period of disqualification of 1 year or drink driving ban

  • The legal processes that must be followed by the police in drink driving cases can be complicated and require the attention of a skilled road traffic expert

  • There have been a number of significant changes in the law in the last few years.

  • There are new prescribed alcohol limits in Scotland. As of December 2014:
    22ug in 100ml of breath (formerly 35ug in 100ml of breath)
    50mg in 100ml of blood (formerly 80mg in 100ml of blood)
    67mg in 100ml of urine (formerly 107mg in 100ml of urine)

  • There has been the removal of a statutory right to provide an alternative specimen of blood or urine in “borderline” cases(since April 2015, by virtue of the Deregulation Act 2015)

  • The device most commonly used by Police Scotland in analysis of breath alcohol is the Intoximeter EC/IR device. A complete understanding of this machine and its limitations is essential for any road traffic expert

  • Previous convictions for drink driving(section 5) or failing to cooperate (section 6 or section 7 offences) can lead to consideration of prison sentences.

  • Reductions in disqualification periods.

  • The Drink Drive Rehabilitation Scheme can be offered to an accused where he/she is convicted of a relevant offence. This typically can reduce a period of disqualification by 25%. The court and the accused must agree to all terms at the time of sentencing

  • In defending any prosecution under section 5 Road Traffic Act it is essential that the instructed legal representative understands the following:

    the requirements of the police investigating a drink driving allegation including relevant cautions

    essential areas of challenge including those of the equipment used by the Police (such as calibration, servicing, incident log history, testing processes, police training with the equipment etc) available defences such as post incident drinking and accuracy of back calculations often undertaken by the prosecution current Police Scotland training methods in the use of the relevant devices and areas of weakness

  • A lot of what was commonly described as ‘loopholes’ in the law over recent years was really a misrepresentation. What was fairly common however was a poorly prepared Crown case and possibly a poorly trained police officer(s) who had conducted much of the investigation.

  • Over the past 5-10 years the Crown have tightened up their knowledge on the subject of drink driving fines & prosecutions as have the Police. There are rarely the very basic errors which were common previously.

  • There are however many lines of enquiry that a good road traffic lawyer will want to make before deciding on the best course to take.

  • If an alcohol reading seems unlikely, or you feel that the police have done something that didn’t seem right at the time in their investigation, or you simply want advice on what is best for you, you should engage a drink driving lawyer from the outset.

  • We regularly employ top forensic experts and scientists in their field to examine the case against an accused. This is because science is often at the heart of the prosecution case, and the prosecution often make mistakes or arrive at false assumptions.

 

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STAY ON THE ROAD WITH BLACKWATER ROAD TRAFFIC LAW. FOR A FREE CONSULTATION CALL 0141 413 8111

 

 

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STAY ON THE ROAD WITH BLACKWATER ROAD TRAFFIC LAW.

FOR A FREE CONSULTATION CALL: 0141 413 8111