December 2009 Archives

December 30, 2009

Marin County - Speed Trap: The Golden Gate Bridge

On December 18, 2009, Marin County traffic ticket attorney John Stanko successfully argued that the use of radar and laser on the Golden Gate Bridge is illegal and constitutes a speed trap. Earlier this fall CHP officers were parked on the bridge monitoring Northbound traffic when their attention was drawn to a vehicle that they believed to be traveling at a high rate of speed. The officers activated their radar gun and clocked the vehicle at 60 mph. They then initiated a traffic stop and cited the driver for Vehicle Code section 22350.

The case went to Court Trial on December 18, 2009 and the Marin County Traffic Court agreed with Attorney John Stanko when he argued that no justification existed for setting the speed limit on the bridge 9 mph under the 85th percentile and that the use of Radar in this case was an illegal speed trap.

California Vehicle Code section 22350 is the Basic Speed Law and states that no person shall drive on a highway at a speed that is greater than reasonable or prudent. Speed traps are defined in Vehicle Codes section 40802. Section 40802 prohibits the enforcement of the speed limit involves the use of radar or any other electronic device unless the speed limit has been justified by an engineering and traffic survey conducted within five years prior to the date of the alleged violation. Further, once an engineering survey has been conducted the speed limit must be set at or within 5 miles per hour under the 85th percentile unless a further reduction is can be justified.

The speed limit on the Golden Gate Bridge is 45 mph, the 85th percentile speed of drivers in the most recent engineering and traffic survey was 56 mph and the majority of drivers in the survey exceeded 45 mph. Thus, the 45 mph speed limit was not set at or within 5 mph under the 85th percentile of drivers and the use of radar or lidar/laser to enforce the speed limit amounts to an illegal speed trap.

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December 29, 2009

Marin DUI Lawyer - Sonoma County holiday crackdown nets 121

Authorities in Sonoma County have arrested 121 drivers for driving under the influence since beginning there holiday DUI crackdown on December 18. As of Monday, December 28, the 13 police agencies participating in the task force had made 121 new DUI arrests and another 23 for outstanding driving under the influence related warrants.

Police officers are reporting that there have been 7 alcohol related accidents resulting in 8 injuries during the crackdown. The most serious crash resulted in a 23 year old Santa Rosa woman being arrested on suspicion of DUI after her passenger was ejected from her car when it went off of Southbound Highway 101 in Santa Rosa early on Christmas morning.

Officers are conducting DUI saturation patrols and checkpoints during the holiday crackdown which ends on January 3, 2010. One driving under the influence checkpoint was to be conducted in Petaluma last Saturday but was canceled because of rain. The police have announced that another checkpoint is scheduled for next weekend in Santa Rosa.

Police officers conducting checkpoints must follow criteria laid out by the California Supreme Court in 1987 in the case of Ingersoll v. Palmer (1987), 43 Cal.3d 1321. The Ingersoll guidelines cover the following categories: The Ingersoll guidelines fall under the following general headings:

1. Decision Making at the Supervisory Level;
2. Limits on Discretion of Field Officers;
3. Maintenance of Safety Conditions (for officers and the general public):
4. Reasonable Location;
5. Time and Duration of the checkpoint;
6. Indicia of Official Nature of Roadblock (signage, lighting, road cones)
7. Length and Nature of Detention; and
8. Advance Publicity.

When confronted with a DUI checkpoint case your Marin/Sonoma County attorney will evaluate each of the Ingersoll guidelines in comparison to your detention. Many legal challenges can be raised to to the use of checkpoints.

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December 15, 2009

Marin County Cops find 8 pounds of pot

A 39 year old man, Aaron Jerome Rathblott, was contacted by Novato Police Officers on Saturday night as he slept in his truck in a park and ride lot. The officers and their police dog smelled marijuana and found suitcase full of pot.

Mr. Rathblott was arrested and booked into the Marin County Jail on felony charges of possession for sale and transportation of marijuana. The police estimate that the pot has a street value of more than $20,000.

Possession of less than an ounce of marijuana is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than $100.00. California Health and Safety Codee section 11357(b). However, a person convicted of possession for sale, section 11359, faces a prison sentence of up to 3 years and someone convicted of transportation, section 11360(a) can receive a state prison sentence of up to 4 years.

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December 14, 2009

Free Taxi Vouchers to help prevent DUI deaths.

A Southern California charity is offering $10.00 taxi cab vouchers to holiday celebrators. The Lev Foundation, formed by family and friends of 25-year-old Daniel Levian, who died in 2008 while the passenger in a drunk driver's car, has given out about 200 vouchers so far.

Michelle Shirin Alfi, Mr. Levian's cousin, says the voucher program will have done its job if it can keep someone from experiencing the pain her family suffered. The Lev Foundation is providing the taxi vouchers through December on their website.

In Marin County and all places in California a person can be charged with murder if she drives while under the influence or with a prohibited blood alcohol level and causes an accident that kills another person. It is never advisable to drink and drive and partygoers would be wise to find a safe ride home. Taking a cab ride home or using a designated driver is much safer than drinking and driving and far cheaper than facing a DUI prosecution.

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December 3, 2009

Thanksgiving Holiday DUI arrests up in San Francisco Bay Area

The California Highway Patrol's effort to stem drunk driving over the holiday weekend lead to slightly more arrests than in 2008. The CHP DUI crackdown began at 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 25, 2009 and had resulted in 87 arrests for driving under the influence by 6:00 a.m. on Friday, November 27, 2009.

The 87 arrests were moderately more than the 83 for the same time period in 2008. Statewide the CHP made 542 DUI arrests compared to 513 in 2008.

A driver arrested during the holiday crackdown must act quickly to protect their rights. You have only ten days from the date of your arrest to request a DMV administrative hearing or your license will automatically be suspended. Further, an arrest in Marin, San Francisco, or elsewhere in the Bay Area will initiate a criminal prosecution by the local district attorney's office. If convicted for DUI you face possible jail time, fines and additional driver's license consequences.

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