McAllen, Texas Criminal Defense, Divorce and DWI Lawyer Johnathan Ball

March 19, 2010

San Juan Texas Shooting Over Marijuana Smoking

During argument over pot smoking, man shoots neighbor

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The Monitor

UPDATED

 

SAN JUAN — A man was shot in the back after confronting his neighbors about smoking marijuana near his young children, police said.

The 32-year-old man was transported to McAllen Medical Center, where he is expected to recover from non life-threatening injuries.

The pot problem began on Saturday when the man confronted the three men about smoking marijuana in the open on the 900 block of Shufford Street, apparently visible to the man’s young children, San Juan Police Chief Juan Gonzalez said.

That day, one of the suspects apparently flashed a pistol and threatened his neighbor.

The dispute turned violent Thursday afternoon when he confronted them again.

The three men allegedly began punching the man outside their house at 913 Shufford St., the chief said. The neighbor fell to the ground. The three neighbors passed around a small-caliber pistol until one of them shot the prone man in the back.

Police said the three suspects, 22-year-old Michael Arroyo, 17-year-old Noe Sifuentes and a 16-year-old juvenile, remained on the run and are members of a local street gang. Gonzalez said investigators believe the trio is hiding in the Pharr-San Juan area and are armed and dangerous. The trio fled the area by the time police arrived minutes later.

Canine units from McAllen and Palmview searched the area. Officers are searching several other locations in the area where the suspects — believed to be armed and dangerous — may be hiding, Gonzalez said.

Neighbor Joe Pineda, who said he is friends with the victim, was pruning tree branches in his yard when he heard the gunshot.

“I heard my friend say, ‘You shot me!”’ said Pineda, 76.

The neighborhood along Shufford Street normally is quiet and most neighbors amicably greet each other, Pineda said. The shooting victim would regularly have cookouts in his yard with his family, he said.

Pineda said the only recent problem that bothers him and his neighbors is the public marijuana smoking across the street.

“They smoke pot all night in there,” he said. “We have never had these problems.”

 

 >> Anyone with information about the shooting or the suspects is urged to contact San Juan Crime Stoppers at (956) 283-9477.

 

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Jared Taylor covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4439.

October 16, 2009

Border Patrol makes six drug busts across Starr County

Border Patrol makes six drug busts across Starr County

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The Monitor

ESCOBARES | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents said they encountered two pickup trucks Tuesday night traveling north together from the Rio Grande near Escobares. As the agents tried to stop the pickups, the lead truck, a pewter Chevrolet, accelerated north. The black Ford F-150 that was tailing the truck made a U-turn, agents said.

Minutes later, agents found the F-150 abandoned behind a nearby business. The truck was filled with 923 pounds of marijuana. The Chevrolet pickup truck escaped. The drugs have a street value of $738,400.

LA CASITA | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents seized nearly a ton of marijuana during a Tuesday morning chase near La Casita, according to an agency statement.

Agents used a spike strip to stop a truck. The truck’s driver bailed out into the nearby brush and managed to evade agents, who found 1,849 pounds of marijuana with the pickup truck. The drugs have a street value of more than $1.4 million.

GARCENO | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents working here Monday morning said they saw several people carrying bundles on their backs. As the group emerged from the brush, they began loading the bundles into a green 1994 Ford F-150 pickup truck that arrived at the area.

The driver headed north toward U.S. Highway 83 but bailed out of the truck after agents tried to pull him over. The driver escaped into the nearby brush.

Agents counted 676 pounds of marijuana in the bed of the pickup truck. The drugs have a street value of $540,800.

RIO GRANDE CITY | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents patrolling south of Rio Grande City on Monday evening said they saw five people climb out of the Rio Grande with bundles strapped to their backs. The group continued north until agents confronted them. The smugglers dropped their packs and took off into the nearby brush, evading arrest.

Agents rounded up and seized the abandoned 388 pounds of marijuana. The drugs have a street value of $310,400.

FRONTON | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents found 489 pounds of marijuana here Sunday after they saw several people carrying bundles from the Rio Grande. Agents confronted the smugglers, who then dropped the drugs and swam across the river to Mexico. Agents said they also found a small aluminum boat loaded with marijuana. The drugs have a street value of $391,200.

LA GRULLA | DRUG BUST

U.S. Border Patrol agents seized 380 pounds of marijuana Saturday that was being transported from the general area of the Rio Grande. Agents conducting a traffic stop found the drugs inside the rear passenger seat area. The drugs have a street value of $304,000.

October 11, 2009

Mission man busted in N.C. with 1,758 pounds of marijuana

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Johnathan Ball @ 6:25 pm
The Monitor

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — A Mission man was arrested here Wednesday when state troopers found 1,758 pounds of marijuana inside his tractor-trailer, according to the Web site of the Asheville Citizen-Times.

Heriberto Flores Jr., 53, of Mission, was charged with marijuana trafficking, Citizen-Times.com reported. He was jailed in Buncombe County with bond set at $500,000.

The drugs were mixed with a load of limes, an investigator with the North Carolina Highway Patrol said Thursday, according to the Web site. With a street value estimated at $6.7 million, the seizure was one of the largest-ever in Western North Carolina, said Sgt. Rodney Crater, criminal interdiction unit supervisor with the agency.

According to public records, Flores has several prior arrests in Texas on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. He has no prior arrests in North Carolina.

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Ana Ley covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. She can be reached at (956) 683-4428.

June 1, 2009

Border Patrol picks up a wheelbarrow full of drugs

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The Monitor

RIO GRANDE CITY — Maybe they should have tried harvesting the sorghum instead.

U.S. Border Patrol agents arrested three men Thursday afternoon after they said they saw them pushing a wheelbarrow full of marijuana from the Rio Grande near La Grulla.

When the agents approached the men about 3:30 p.m. Thursday, they bailed on their load and fled into nearby brush, agents said in a statement. Agents searched the area and took three men into custody.

The 20 bricks of marijuana inside the wheelbarrow weighed about 223 pounds and carried an estimated value of $178,400, agents said. A photo of the wheelbarrow taken by agents at the scene shows the load standing beside a sorghum field.

The drugs were turned over to the Starr County High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area task force.

To report suspicious activity, contact the Border Patrol’s Rio Grande Valley sector at 1-800-863-9382.

May 26, 2009

Border Patrol Getting Bigger Marijuana Busts In Hidalgo County

BP: Frequency, size of marijuana seizures keep climbing

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McALLEN — The frequency and size of marijuana seizures in the Rio Grande Valley continues to grow significantly compared to last year, the U.S. Border Patrol announced this week.

During the week of May 11 to May 17, for example, the agency’s Rio Grande Valley sector confiscated more than nine tons of marijuana compared to 3.8 tons during the same time period in 2008.

Agents conducted 60 seizures that week, according to a Border Patrol news release.

Officials attributed the 71 percent increase in narcotics seizures to increased manpower and a better infrastructure to prevent drug smuggling.

“Our ability to detect and apprehend is higher,” said Border Patrol spokesman John Lopez.

The Border Patrol seized more marijuana in the first six months of 2009 than in all of 2008, said Daniel Doty, a local Border Patrol spokesman.

Lopez said smugglers also appear to be smuggling larger quantities into the United States because of added patrols by the Mexican government.

“They’re taking larger risks,” Lopez said.

The largest seizure of the week occurred in Rio Grande City when agents found 3,883 pounds of marijuana inside an abandoned truck.

The driver of the truck had led agents on a chase away from the Rio Grande before ditching the vehicle and fleeing on foot.

Agents found more marijuana scattered throughout a nearby dilapidated shed.

Also last week, agents seized 1,454 pounds of marijuana from two separate vehicles after each was seen leaving the Rio Grande area.

In total, agents seized 18,159 pounds of marijuana with an estimated street value of about $14.5 million.

The drugs were turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

The Rio Grande Valley sector has nine stations stretching from Brownsville to Corpus Christi.

Ana Ley covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. She can be reached at (956) 683-4428.

Large Marijuana Bust in Pharr, Texas

Police bust 1,600 pounds of marijuana at Pharr truck stop

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The Monitor

PHARR — Police busted more than 1,600 pounds of marijuana at a truck stop here last weekend.

The bust happened Saturday afternoon at the Silver Spur Truck Stop, 2705 N. Cage Boulevard, after a police canine unit was patrolling the parking area, Pharr police said in a statement.

The dog alerted police of a strong narcotics odor emanating from a black 2001 Freightliner Tractor and a white 1998 Freuhauf trailer parked at the truck stop. The vehicle and trailer were unoccupied, police said.

Officers took the tractor trailer to the Pharr-Reynosa International Bridge port of entry, where it was x-rayed and 96 bundles of marijuana weighing 1,677 pounds were discovered inside.

The drug bust remains under police investigation

May 14, 2009

Arnold Schwarzenegger: it’s high time to review marijuana law

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Johnathan Ball @ 2:45 pm

Arnold Schwarzenegger: it’s high time to review marijuana law

Arnold Schwarzenegger has never apologised for smoking pot – and loving it — at the height of his bodybuilding career in the 1970s. Now, as a struggling Republican governor of California reaching a crossroads in his political career, he might yet become America’s most visible advocate for legalising marijuana.

The actor-turned-politician gladdened the heart of every joint-roller and dope fiend across the Golden State earlier this week when he said it was time for a full debate on legalisation.

Schwarzenegger was careful not to say too much – he stopped shorting of saying he was in favour of legalising cannabis now – but his words broke a long-standing taboo among both Republicans and Democrats who have previously felt obliged to say marijuana must remain illegal, and marijuana users and pushers be subject to criminal prosecution.

The governor spoke in response to a new public opinion poll showing that 56% of registered voters in California favour legalising and taxing marijuana – in part to help the state out of the worst budget crisis in its history. The state faces a shortfall of billions of dollars a year because of the bad economy, and public services from schools to hospitals to fire-fighting services are under mounting threat.

Asked if he too favoured legalisation, Schwarzenegger told reporters: “Well, I think it’s not time for that, but I think it’s time for a debate. I think all of those ideas of creating extra revenues [are worth considering] … I think we ought to study very carefully what other countries are doing that have legalised marijuana and other drugs. What effect did it have on those countries?”

The redwood forests of northern California are famous for their marijuana cultivation, creating an underground economy that has continued to thrive despite America’s decades-long war on drugs. The Golden State has been a leading rebel against the federal government’s strict interdiction policies, becoming the first of 14 US states to allow marijuana for medical use as far back as 1996.

Legalisation, however, has never been a serious part of the agenda.

The most immediate effect of the governor’s comments is likely to be a boost for a legalisation bill recently introduced in the state assembly by a San Francisco liberal Democrat called Tom Ammiano. Such bills pop up every few years and are almost always ignored or defeated, but this one may just be different now.

“I look forward to working with the governor and my colleagues in the effort to be the first state in the nation to enact commonsense policy on marijuana,” an elated Ammiano said. His proposed system of legalising and taxing marijuana would raise an estimated $1.3bn a year in tax revenue alone, according to state legislative analysts. The savings in law enforcement and incarceration costs could be many billions more.

Schwarzenegger may feel he has little to lose. He feels out of step within an increasingly rigid, increasingly hardline conservative Republican party, and the economic crisis in California has pushed his popularity ratings below 40%.

May 10, 2009

The High Times of Gerry Goldstein

The San Antonio lawyer started out defending friends who had been busted for smoking pot. Twenty-five years later, his clients are big-time dope dealers and international cocaine kingpins — and he believes he’s saving the world.

The arrest and extradition in January of reputed Mexican drug lord Juan García Abrego created something of a stampede among criminal lawyers. The McAllen office of Abrego’s longtime counselor, Roberto “Bobby Joe” Yzaguirre, was overwhelmed by sales pitches from attorneys all over the country, forceful or flattering letters and faxes explaining why they and they alone should be hired as part of the defense team. Farther north, in Houston, speculation about who would get the job was rampant. Florida dope lawyers pumped their Texas colleagues (“Is it you?” they wanted to know). One lawyer sparked a blaze of gossip after spying the name “Frank Rubino” on the visitors log at the Harris County jail, where Abrego was incarcerated. (“Wasn’t me,” the Miami attorney for dictator—drug smuggler Manuel Noriega said.)

Though Abrego could be quite charming and humorous—“You’d feel very comfortable if he was selling you a car,” said one acquaintance—he would not hold much allure for the average person. After all, the 51-year-old car thief turned kingpin was alleged to have presided over the flow of Colombian cocaine through northern Mexico into the U.S., an operation that reaped $20 billion a year, according to estimates by the Drug Enforcement Agency. He was believed to be armed and dangerous—Abrego’s indictment charged him with authorizing “the murders of numerous individuals,” which were thought to include everyone from business rivals to nosy journalists. There were additional charges of money laundering, drug smuggling, and attempted bribery. There were dark hints of political assassinations, of corruption within the now tainted administration of former president Carlos Salinas de Gortari. There was the dubious distinction, in 1995, of a spot on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list. Innocent until proven guilty, okay, but either way, Juan García Abrego looked at best like a pretty bad guy.

Unless, of course, you were a criminal lawyer: then you knew that everyone was entitled to the best defense possible, that if society cannot treat the worst of us with fairness, then what of the rest of us? Maybe the extradition wasn’t legit. Maybe the investigation was fishy—the DEA and the FBI were rumored to have cut deals with more than seventy felons to get their man. There were lots of maybes, except, of course, for one: The Abrego case was the legal equivalent of a gusher. Along with a fee that could hit seven figures, it offered lots of media coverage that doubled as free advertising—in other words, big money up front and down the road in the form of future clients. Juan García Abrego might get life without parole, but the lawyer who represented him couldn’t lose.

Roberto Yzaguirre knew this as well as anyone, of course, but as the only lawyer actually hired by Abrego, he had other concerns. Having represented clients facing drug-related charges in the Valley for more than twenty years, he knew that alone he lacked the resources to go against the federal government in a case of this magnitude. And as a man whose courtliness belied his shrewdness, he had known whom he wanted as partners from the beginning. Tony Canales, a criminal lawyer from Corpus, was an obvious choice: The former U.S. attorney was an old friend who spoke Spanish and knew the ways of the federal government, particularly the federal government in South Texas, better than just about anyone. But Yzaguirre needed someone else to complete his team, someone who was not just a great trial lawyer and a great drug lawyer but a great book lawyer, someone with the intellect to, at a moment’s notice, tip the vagaries of the Constitution in his client’s favor. Someone who, if need be, could work out the negotiations should Abrego decide to cooperate with the government, testifying against an even bigger fish like, say, Salinas himself. Someone who had no problem representing the worst of us and, in fact, saw that as a matter of conscience. When you came right down to it, there really was just one man for the job.

“Goldstein!”

“GOLDstein!!”

“GOLDSTEIN!!!”

THE ATTORNEYS GATHERED IN MIAMI’S fountainebleau hotel for the 1996 midwinter meeting of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers make way for Gerald Goldstein like supplicants in a temple. He has flown in from his San Antonio home this morning and will fly out shortly after his speech. Whipping a cart of visual aids through the hotel’s gilded warrens, he has the air of a man unable or unwilling to downshift. Even without his haste, Goldstein would stand out amid these cheerful conventioneers in their sport shirts and jeans. His salt-and-pepper hair is slicked back, taming curls that twenty years ago approximated an Afro. Long past the age of love beads and bell-bottoms, when he first made a name for himself defending conscientious objectors, Goldstein now wears scholarly tortoiseshell glasses, which complement his impeccably crafted sport coat, which is enhanced by a contrasting orange-and-green tie and the crispest white shirt. At 52 he is trimmer than he was at 42, his hawk-like nose and deepening crow’s-feet telegraphing wisdom, not age. The enfant terrible has become an éminence grise, simultaneously elite and egalitarian. “Hey, brother! Hey, brother! Hey, broth-er!” he says by way of greeting, having his cake and eating it too.

So it has always been with Gerald Goldstein, a man who has made his reputation championing civil rights and his fortune defending dopers, two activities that frequently and fortuitously overlap. He has never shied away from a controversial case—in 1974 Goldstein, no fan of government censorship, defended a San Antonio theater manager’s right to show Deep Throat and, in 1990, rap group 2 Live Crew’s need to be as nasty as they wanted to be; infuriated by overzealous prosecutors, in 1980 he represented one of Texas House Speaker Billy Clayton’s cronies in the kickback scandal known as Brilab. Even so, it is safe to say that drugs have been Goldstein’s life. It was his 1978 appeal that reversed the convictions in what has come to be known as the Piedras Negras Jailbreak Case, in which two Texans stormed the border city’s jail and, Rambo style, freed fourteen American inmates charged with drug offenses. Goldstein was an early and influential supporter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. He is a counselor and loyal friend to superhead Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, wrote an amicus brief on behalf of Noriega, and has defended on drug charges the sons of such prominent men as BeBe Rebozo and assorted San Antonio swells. The majority of newspaper clippings framed on his office walls have to do with his victorious work in the field of drug-related defense work: a 1979 High Times article that named him one of the top ten dope defenders in America; a 1983 San Antonio Express story headlined POT CONVICTIONS THROWN OUT, POLICE SURVEILLANCE WAS TOO ORWELLIAN; a 1985 Texas Lawyer story titled “U.S. Must Return $10 Million to Drug Smuggler”; a 1989 San Antonio Express-News story headlined FEDERAL CASE DEAD IN RECORD DRUG DEAL. Let the general public scowl—“Rich libertarian is druggie mouthpiece” the late, irascible Express-News columnist Paul Thompson declared in another clipping on the wall—Gerald Goldstein loves his work.

And why shouldn’t he? It has earned him the profound respect of his colleagues, who elected him president of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association in 1992 and president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers in 1994 and 1995. He is a sought-after commentator on CNN, a frequent contributor to op-ed pages, the kind of guy whose number is in the Rolodexes of reporters around the nation. If Americans are ambivalent about drugs—outraged by their destructiveness but bitterly divided over what to do about them—then Gerry Goldstein is the embodiment of that ambivalence, and has profited mightily from it.

Nowhere is this ambivalence more apparent than here, in Miami, a place revitalized in part by a TV show about two drug-busting cops in silk suits, a place that now pays the price for its drug culture in the form of murdered tourists. The lawyers gathered here seem immune to this irony, absorbed in the investigative databases on display or in swapping war stories (“I got a reversal in my drug case—that means my client will only have to serve ten years back to back,” says one. Says another: “I just won a two-billion-dollar forfeiture!”) They gossip—“I hear Abrego’s cooperating, so it’ll be an easy case for y’all,” one lawyer says, baiting Goldstein—or they make plans for drinks at the Delano, the hot new hotel owned by Ian Schrager, the man who helped make cocaine a glamour drug in the eighties with his club in Manhattan, Studio 54. The drug culture isn’t just a culture nowadays but an economy, one that is so pervasive that many Americans regard it as unavoidable.

Starr County Sheriff’s Pleads Guilty to Drug Charges

Former Starr County sheriff pleads guilty

The Monitor

McALLEN — Former Starr County Sheriff Reymundo “Rey” Guerra pleaded guilty Friday to one federal count of drug smuggling conspiracy, a week before his case was set to head to trial.

As part of a plea agreement with prosecutors, the ex-lawman admitted to using his elected office to aid narcotics traffickers based in Starr County and Miguel Alemán, Tamps. He now faces up to life in prison at a sentencing hearing scheduled for July.

“He feels that he’s let down his family, friends and constituents,” his attorney, Phillip Hilder, said Friday. “He’s deeply remorseful for that.”

FBI agents arrested Guerra last fall as part of a nationwide sweep of Gulf Cartel members and their associates. But federal prosecutors said Friday that he did not actually play a role in bringing any drugs into the United States and dubbed him a “minor participant” in the illegal organization.

Instead, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Toni Treviño, Guerra shared sensitive law enforcement intelligence with the leader of a smuggling cell – Jose Carlos Hinojosa – whom Guerra first met when the man was legitimately working with law enforcement in Mexico.

Federal prosecutors have since linked Hinojosa to high-ranking members of the Zetas – a paramilitary drug smuggling organization once closely associated with the Gulf Cartel. He pleaded guilty last month to two counts of drug and money laundering conspiracy.

“Hinojosa would assist Guerra with the return of various suspects who had escaped from the United States,” Treviño said.

Guerra first claimed he had provided Hinojosa with the names of informants and addresses targeted for raids in Starr County because he still believed the man was working with police.

But the sheriff was fully aware as early as January 2007 that Hinojosa had abandoned his old role to become one of the region’s top drug traffickers, Treviño said Friday. Guerra also accepted periodic payments of $2,000 to $3,000 in exchange for leaking information.

In one of the most serious instances, the former sheriff allegedly pressured a deputy to give up the name of one of his confidential informants after a June 2007 raid on an Hinojosa stash house.

Hinojosa contacted Guerra seeking the source who led authorities to the home.

At the time, FBI agents were already investigating the sheriff for suspected involvement with the Hinojosa drug trafficking organization and instructed the deputy to give his boss false information.

Guerra passed the name along to Hinojosa and instructed him to tell the owner of the stash house to prepare fake leasing documents for a renter living in Mexico.

“He knowingly provided a false document to deflect attention,” Treviño said.

Guerra’s arrest last year during the middle of a re-election campaign caused problems for Starr County voters, as he was the only candidate for sheriff on the November ballot.

He was forced to resign his post twice – once before the election and again afterward – as a condition of his bond.

After a re-arraignment hearing Friday, U.S. District Judge Randy Crane allowed Guerra to remain free on bond pending sentencing.

Two of the former sheriff’s co-defendants – Saul Mendez Jr. and Mario Alberto Mascorro – also pleaded guilty Friday to one count each of federal money laundering conspiracy. They face up to 20 years in prison.

The pleas close the case against the 20 defendants originally arrested on suspicion of participating in the Hinojosa drug trafficking cell. All have pleaded guilty. Eight fugitives remain at large.

April 18, 2009

What to do after a DWI arrest.

Being arrested for DWI in Texas is a serious matter. You must begin working right away to give yourself the best chance possible of successfully navigating the legal system.
Contact the Texas Department of Public Safety and Request an ALR Hearing.

If you refuse to provide a blood or breath specimen after being arrested on suspicion of DWI in Texas, you only have a short window of time, fifteen days, to request an Administrative License Revocation (ALR) Hearing. At the ALR hearing, a Judge designated by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) will hear your case. At this ALR hearing, the DPS judge will decide if there was sufficient probable cause to arrest you on suspicion of DWI. If the judge determines there was probable cause to arrest you, then your license is suspended. The ALR hearing is important because it is your first chance to confront the arresting officer about the reasons behind your arrest. Having an experienced DWI attorney at this hearing will be very helpful. An experienced DWI lawyer will understand how to question the officer correctly. Even if you lose the ALR hearing (which more often than not you will) you still gain valuable information that can help your case later.

If you missed the deadline to request an ALR hearing, contact an attorney or request an attorney be appointed for you.

Even if you missed your chance to have an ALR hearing, you still need to begin defending yourself against the charges as soon as possible. If you are financially unable to hire a lawyer, contact the Indigent Defense Office in your county and tell them you want to apply for a Court appointed lawyer. Once you have a lawyer, you can begin the discovery process. During discovery your lawyer will be allowed to review your file. Your file will contain a copy of the police report, arrest records and most importantly, a video. If you refused to provide a breath specimen, this video will be your best (or possibly your most detrimental) piece of evidence. It is important that your lawyer be hired or appointed early enough in the process to review the tape, discuss the tape with you and decide on a course of action for your case.

Talk with your lawyer about what is in the prosecutor’s file and where your case should go

Once your attorney has reviewed the prosecutor’s file, sit down with him or her and discuss what was in the file. What did the report say? Was it accurate? If not, tell your attorney where the inaccuracies are in the report. Also, discuss the video. How did you appear on the video? Were you able to follow the officer’s commands? How was your voice? Did you slur or was your speech clear? These are the types of factors that need to be looked at in deciding where your case should go. If you look good on the video tape, you will want to discuss the possibility of taking your case to trial. In discussing your trial, ask your attorney about their trial experience; their results at trial and whether they recommend you go to trial. On the other hand, if you impaired on the video tape, discuss with your attorney the options for plea bargaining with the State. Also, make sure that you provide your attorney with any paperwork you receive from the Court.

Obtaining an Occupational License

Your license can end up being suspended following an arrest for DWI if you refuse to provide a breath sample and then either forget to request an ALR hearing or lose your ALR hearing. If you license has been suspended, it is illegal for you to operate a motor vehicle for any reason. That is why you will need to obtain an Occupational Driver’s License (ODL). An ODL allows you to legally operate a motor vehicle at certain times of day. In order to obtain an ODL, you need to file a petition requesting an ODL, stating the reasons for needing an ODL, and you must also submit an affidavit of necessity in support of your ODL. Most importantly, you must contact your insurance company and obtain an SR-22 form. An SR-22 is a document you must provide to the Court in order to receive your ODL. Once all this paperwork has been gathered together, it can be submitted to the Court. If you are granted your ODL, you can then legally operate your motor vehicle at the times stated in your ODL.

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