BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 614
                                                                  Page 1

          Date of Hearing:   January 12, 2010
          Counsel:                Nicole J. Hanson


                         ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SAFETY
                                 Tom Ammiano, Chair

                 AB 614 (Miller) - As Introduced:  February 25, 2009
           

                                     FOR VOTE ONLY
           
           
           SUMMARY  :   Creates a misdemeanor against any person who refuses  
          to submit to a chemical test as requested by an officer upon  
          reasonable suspicion that he or she is driving a motor vehicle  
          whilst under the influence (DUI) of drugs and or alcohol.      
          Specifically,  this bill  :  

          1)Provides that upon refusing to submit to a chemical test a  
            person shall be subject imprisonment in the county jail for  
            not less than 96 hours, at least 48 hours of which shall be  
            continuous, nor more than six months, and by a fine of not  
            less than $390, nor more than $1,000.

          2)Punishes a person who refuses to submit to a chemical test  
            within 10 years of one or more separate violations by  
            imprisonment in the county jail for not less than 90 days nor  
            more than one year and by a fine of not less than $390 nor  
            more than $1,000.  The person's privilege to operate a motor  
            vehicle shall be suspended by the Department of Motor Vehicles  
            (DMV). The court shall require the person to surrender the  
            driver's license.

           EXISTING LAW  :

          1)Mandates that if a person refuses the officer's request to  
            submit to, or fails to complete, a chemical test or tests,  
            upon receipt of the officer's sworn statement that the officer  
            had reasonable cause to believe the person had been driving a  
            motor whilst under the influence of drugs and or alcohol, and  
            that the person had refused to submit to, or did not complete,  
            the test or tests after being requested by the officer, the  
            DMV shall do one of the following:









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             a)   Suspend the person's privilege to operate a motor  
               vehicle for a period of one year.

             b)   Revoke the person's privilege to operate a motor vehicle  
               for a period of two years if the refusal occurred within 10  
               years of either a separate violation of a driving under the  
               influence offense, or a suspension or revocation of the  
               person's privilege to operate a motor vehicle pursuant to  
               this section or for an offense that occurred on a separate  
               occasion.

             c)   Revoke the person's privilege to operate a motor vehicle  
               for a period of three years if the refusal occurred within  
               10 years of any of the following:

               i)     Two or more separate violations of reckless driving,  
                 or of an offense involving driving under the influence of  
                 drugs and or alcohol, or any combination thereof, that  
                 resulted in convictions.

               ii)    Two or more suspensions or revocations of the  
                 person's privilege to operate a motor vehicle for  
                 offenses that occurred on separate occasions.

               iii)   Any combination of two or more of those convictions  
                 or administrative suspensions or revocations.  [Vehicle  
                 Code Section 13353(a).]

          2)States that a person who drives a motor vehicle is deemed to  
            have given his or her consent to chemical testing of his or  
            her blood or breath for the purpose of determining the  
            alcoholic and or drug content of his or her blood, if lawfully  
            arrested for an offense of DUI of drugs and or alcohol.   
            [Vehicle Code Sections 23612(a)(1)(A) and (B).]

          3)Provides that testing shall be incidental to a lawful arrest  
            and administered at the direction of a peace officer having  
            reasonable cause to believe the person was DUI of drugs and or  
            alcohol.  [Vehicle Code Section 12612(a)(1)(C).]

          4)Requires persons to be told that his or her failure to submit  
            to, or the failure to complete, the required chemical testing  
            will result in a fine, mandatory imprisonment if the person is  
            convicted of a DUI, and:  (i) the suspension of the person's  
            privilege to operate a motor vehicle for a period of one year,  








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            (ii) the revocation of the person's privilege to operate a  
            motor vehicle for a period of two years if the refusal occurs  
            within 10 years of a separate violation of a DUI offense that  
            resulted in a conviction, or if the person's privilege to  
            operate a motor vehicle has been suspended or revoked for an  
            offense that occurred on a separate occasion, or (iii) the  
            revocation of the person's privilege to operate a motor  
            vehicle for a period of three years if the refusal occurs  
            within 10 years of two or more separate violations of a DUI  
            offense or any combination thereof, that resulted in  
            convictions, or if the person's privilege to operate a motor  
            vehicle has been suspended or revoked two or more times for  
            offenses that occurred on separate occasions, or if there is  
            any combination of those convictions or administrative  
            suspensions or revocations.  [Vehicle Code Section  
            23612(a)(1)(D).]

          5)Gives persons who are lawfully arrested for DUI of an  
            alcoholic beverage, a choice of whether the test shall be of  
            his or her blood or breath and the officer shall advise the  
            person that he or she has that choice.  If the person arrested  
            either is incapable, or states that he or she is incapable, of  
            completing the chosen test, the person shall submit to the  
            remaining test. If blood or breath tests, or both, are  
            unavailable, then a urine test shall be administered.   
            [Vehicle Code Section 23612(a)(2)(A).]

           FISCAL EFFECT  :   Unknown

           COMMENTS  :   

           1)Author's Statement  :  According to the author, "AB 614 will  
            eliminate the evidentiary advantage a suspect gains by  
            refusing to submit to a chemical test upon his or her arrest  
            for DUI by making such a refusal punishable as a misdemeanor.   
            Currently, the law imposes a duty upon all such arrested  
            suspects to submit to a chemical test upon request of the  
            arresting office, but effectively does nothing to assist the  
            prosecution in obtaining a conviction in such cases were the  
            defendant denies access to the only reliable evidence of their  
            sobriety.  This bill will eliminate that evidentiary advantage  
            by creating a new crime of DUI refusal that is similar, under  
            the law, to a DUI conviction with the same punishment as  
            specified under the DUI statutes.  It will also make such a  
            refusal conviction prior-able in the same fashion as a DUI  








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            conviction."

           2)Background  :  According to information provided by the author,  
            "There a growing trend in California for suspected drunk  
            drivers to completely refuse to participate in a DUI  
            investigation when they are the target of the investigation.   
            These individuals often will refuse to answer any questions  
            regarding their alcohol consumption to prevent any blood-level  
            extrapolations or burn-off calculations, they will refuse to  
            perform field sobriety tests (FSTs) to prevent the officer  
            from objectively evaluating their sobriety, and they will  
            refuse to submit to any chemical test to deny the officer the  
            only reliable evidence of their blood or breath alcohol  
            concentrations.  This oftentimes leaves the officer with no  
            proof of the suspect's impairment other than the odor of  
            alcohol and existence of red, watery eyes.  This creates an  
            obvious evidentiary advantage for the defendant where the  
            prosecution must prove actual impairment and/or a blood  
            alcohol level of .08% or more.  Because law enforcement  
            agencies are reluctant to force a blood drawn in these refusal  
            cases for fear of civil liability, AB 614 will eliminate the  
            evidentiary advantage gained by a refusal by creating a new  
            crime of DUI refusal with the same consequences as a DUI  
            conviction."

           3)Implied Consent Laws and Punishment  :  Implied consent laws  
            provide that any person who has applied for a license to drive  
            on the state's public highways has implicitly consented to  
            take a blood-alcohol test if arrested on suspicion of DUI.  If  
            the driver refuses, police are not permitted to force  
            compliance.  The driver's license will, however, be revoked  
            for non-compliance by provision of an "implied consent  
            penalty."  A driver arrested on suspicion of DUI thus faces a  
            classic Hobson's choice:  if he or she agrees to take a  
            blood-alcohol test, he or she risks that an unfavorable result  
            will aid in his or her criminal conviction; if he or she  
            refuses, his or her license will be summarily revoked by the  
            DMV for a period of one year. 

          All 50 states have enacted implied consent laws.  Revocation of  
            a driver's license under state implied consent laws is  
            considered a civil penalty, independent and separate from  
            criminal DUI sanctions, in almost all jurisdictions.  While  
            most states have opted to encourage submission to  
            blood-alcohol testing by imposing civil penalties for refusal,  








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            two states, Alaska and Nebraska, have made refusal to submit  
            to a chemical test when under arrest for DUI a separate  
            misdemeanor with penalties identical to those imposed under  
            criminal DUI charges.  [Zaleha, Alaska's Criminalization of  
            Refusal to Take a Breath Test:  Is it a Permissible  
            Warrantless Search Under the Fourth Amendment?  (1988) 5  
            Alaska L. Rev. 263.]

          This bill imposes the same penalties for being convicted of a  
            DUI as a person who refuses to submit to a chemical test.   
            Thus, a person could be found not guilty of DUI, but be  
            subjected to the same penalties there under if he or she  
            refuses to submit to a chemical test.  Does this punishment  
            fit the crime?  Should the refusal of submitting to a chemical  
            test be a crime?  

          Moreover, this bill surmises that persons who refuse to submit  
            to a chemical test are guilty of DUI.  American jurisprudence  
            does not support such assumptions. A person is innocent until  
            proven guilty.  In addition thereto, there are many objective  
            factors that peace officers take into account when evaluating  
            a person for DUI.  It is under the totality of the  
            circumstances whether there is probable cause to arrest  
            someone for DUI.  All of these circumstances (red watery eyes,  
            odor of alcohol, slurred speech, bad driving, poor field  
            sobriety tests, the subject's statements, etc. etc.) are  
            collected before the implied consent requirement (submitting  
            to a chemical test) comes into effect. Thus, if there is  
            enough evidence to make an arrest for DUI based upon the  
            totality of the circumstances that the person is DUI, there  
            should be enough evidence with or without a chemical test to  
            obtain a conviction. 

           4)Due Process Required for DMV Administrative Hearings  :  "  
            '[Due] process,' unlike some legal rules, is not a technical  
            conception with a fixed content unrelated to time, place and  
            circumstances."  [Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy (1961) 367 U.S.  
            886, 895 ]  "[Due] process is flexible and calls for such  
            procedural protections as the particular situation demands."   
            Morrissey v. Brewer (1972) 408 U.S. 471, 481.]  Whether  
            administrative procedures are constitutionally sufficient  
            requires an analysis of the governmental and private interests  
            that are affected.  [Arnett v. Kennedy (1974) 416 U.S. 134,  
            167-168.] 
           








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          In Mackey v. Montrym (1979) 443 U.S. 1, the Supreme Court  
            considered a due process challenge to a Massachusetts statute  
            mandating the administrative suspension of a driver's license  
            because of a driver's refusal to take a breath-analysis test  
            upon arrest for DUI of an intoxicating liquor.  The statute  
            provided for an immediate hearing upon request after a person  
            surrendered his or her license. The question in the case was  
            whether due process required a pre-suspension hearing.  (Id.  
            at p. 10.)

          The court stated that the determination of what process is due  
            requires identification and balancing of three distinct  
            factors:  (a) the private interest affected by the official  
            action; (b) the risk of an erroneous deprivation of that  
            interest through the procedures used, and the probable value,  
            if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and  
            (c) the government's interest,  including the function  
            involved and the financial and administrative burdens which  
            would be entailed by additional safeguards.  [Ibid., citing  
            Mathews v. Eldridge (1976) 424 U.S. 319, 335.]

          As it weighed these factors, the Mackey court focused on the  
            public safety purpose of the administrative suspension statute  
            and noted that states have traditionally been granted great  
            leeway in adopting summary procedures to protect public health  
            and safety.  The court reasoned that the state's paramount  
            interest in public safety was substantially served by the  
            summary suspension procedure for several reasons, including  
            its deterrent effect on drunk driving and the prompt removal  
            from the road of those who drink and drive.  [Mackey, supra,  
            443 U.S. 1 at pp. 17-18.]  Emphasizing that a hearing to  
            resolve any questions of fact was available immediately upon  
            suspension, the court concluded that the state's compelling  
            interest in highway safety justified the state in making a  
            summary suspension effective pending the outcome of that  
            hearing.  (Id. at pp. 18-19.)

          Driving is a privilege, not a right, and license revocation is a  
            civil, not a criminal, sanction. [Moomjian v. Zolin (1993) 12  
            Cal.App.4th 1606, 1612.]  Thus, the determination of probable  
            cause does not need to be accompanied by the full panoply of  
            adversary safeguards such as counsel, confrontation,  
            cross-examination, and compulsory process for witnesses as is  
            the case with criminal proceedings.  A license erroneously  
            suspended would cause personal inconvenience and possible  








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            economic hardship.  But, however substantial such a property  
            interest may be, it is no more substantial than the right to  
            pretrial freedom in criminal cases because of the presumption  
            of innocence.  
           
          This bill allows a DMV hearing officer, through an  
            administrative hearing and upon a finding of probable cause  
            that a person refused a chemical test, to sentence that person  
            to prison or jail.  The Due Process Clause of the Fifth  
            Amendment guarantees that "no person shall . . . be deprived  
            of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."   
            (U.S. Const., 5th Amend.)  Further, the hearing must be  
            "appropriate to the nature of the case."  [Mullane v. Central  
            Hanover Bank & Trust Co. (1950) 339 U.S. 306, 313.]  This bill  
            forgoes the procedural safeguards required by due process.   
            The fundamental right of liberty may not be seized from the  
            accused without a full panoply of adversary safeguards such as  
            counsel, confrontation, cross-examination, and compulsory  
            process for witnesses as is the case with criminal  
            proceedings.  Moreover, neither an administrative hearing  
            officer, nor the DMV have the power to impose criminal such  
            sanctions.

           5)Double Jeopardy  :  The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth  
            Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that "no  
            person shall . . . be subject for the same offence to be twice  
            put in jeopardy of life or limb."  (U.S. Const., 5th Amend.)   
            The clause has been interpreted many times by the Court as  
            protecting against three distinct abuses:  a second  
            prosecution for the same offense after acquittal, a second  
            prosecution for the same offense after conviction, and  
            multiple punishments for the same offense.  [United States v.  
            Halper (1989) 490 U.S. 435, 440.]  In order for an individual  
            to invoke the protections of the proscriptions against double  
            jeopardy, he or she must prove three elements:  the  
            punishments must have arisen out of the same act or offense,  
            both prosecutions must have occurred in separate proceedings  
            and must have resulted in separate punishments, and the  
            penalty imposed must have been a punishment and not remedial  
            in nature.  [McCurdy, Talking Points:  Double  
            Jeopardy/Administrative License Revocation (1995) 29  
            Prosecutor 21, p. 21.]

              a)   The Punishments Arise Out of the Same Act or Offense  :  A  
               punishment is said to arise out of the same act or offense  








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               if, "to establish an essential element of an offense  
               charged in [the second] prosecution, the government will  
               prove conduct that constitutes an offense for which the  
               defendant has already been prosecuted."  [Grady v. Corbin  
               (1990) 495 U.S. 508, 510.]  In other words, if a person has  
               violated two distinct statutory provisions, double jeopardy  
               will not bar a subsequent prosecution under one, after a  
               conviction or acquittal under the other, if each separate  
               provision requires "proof of an additional fact [or  
               element] which the other provision does not."  [Blockburger  
               v. United States (1932) 284 U.S. 299, 304.] 

             Double jeopardy may also bar a prosecution if one of the  
               offenses is a "lesser included" element of another offense.  
                [See Costarelli v. Commonwealth (1978) 373 N.E.2d 1183,  
               1188.]  For example, in Costarelli v. Commonwealth, the  
               court found that since the unauthorized use of a motor  
               vehicle is a "lesser included crime of larceny of a motor  
               vehicle," a dismissal of the lesser charge by a previous  
               court barred a subsequent prosecution for larceny.  (Id. at  
               1187-88.)  Similarly, double-jeopardy principles barred the  
               adjudication of unauthorized use.  (Id. at 188-89.) 

             This bill punishes those who refuse to submit to a chemical  
               test in a DMV administrative hearing. Further, this bill  
               punishes refusal the same as a person convicted of DUI with  
               a special enhancement of refusing to submit to a chemical  
               test.  Thus, refusing to submit to a chemical test is an  
               essential element to both crimes and is a lesser included  
               crime of DUI whilst failing to submit to a chemical test.

              b)   Both Prosecutions Occur in Separate Proceedings and  
               Result in Separate Punishments  :  A legislature may  
               authorize multiple punishments so long as it does so by  
               containing the punishments within the same proceeding.   
               [See Missouri v. Hunter (1983) 459 U.S. 359, 365.]  Such  
               punishments, however, violate double jeopardy principles if  
               they are given in separate proceedings.  [McCurdy, supra,  
               at 21.]  Proceedings are deemed separate when both arise  
               from similar or related facts, but are subsequently  
               prosecuted in different courts and under different docket  
               numbers.  [Halper, supra, 490 U.S. 435 at 437-38.] 

             This bill authorizes multiple punishments in two proceedings.  
                The first punishment may occur after a probable cause  








                                                                  AB 614
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               finding in a DMV administrative proceeding, and a second  
               punishment may be applied after a conviction in a criminal  
               court. 

              c)   The Penalty Imposed Is a Punishment and Is Not Remedial  
               in Nature  :  No party may be punished twice for the same  
               offense and, if a defendant is sentenced for a new  
               conviction on the same offense, prior punishment for such  
               an offense must be credited.  [See North Carolina v. Pearce  
               (1969) 395 U.S. 711, 717.]  If a sanction serves a remedial  
               purpose instead of punishment, however, double jeopardy  
               does not bar its application.  (See Halper, supra, 490 U.S.  
               435, at 443.)  A sanction, either criminal or civil,  
               constitutes punishment when it serves the goals of  
               punishment.  (Id. at 448.)  In United States v. Halper, for  
               example, the Court found that a civil sanction of over  
               $130,000 was a punishment since the government incurred  
               actual damages of only $585.  [(1989) 490 U.S. 435.]  In  
               United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, however, a civil  
               sanction of $315,000 was considered remedial since  
               "proceedings were designed to 'protect the government from  
               financial loss'-rather than to 'vindicate public justice.'  
               "  [(1943) 317 U.S. 537, 539.]

             In Halper, the Supreme Court held that the government may not  
               subject a citizen to a subsequent civil sanction, following  
               punishment in a criminal prosecution, unless the civil  
               sanction is remedial.  [Halper, supra, 490 U.S. 435 at  
               448-49.]  The Supreme Court based its holding on the idea  
               that a civil sanction is not solely remedial, but is also a  
               form of retribution or deterrence, especially where the  
               sanction is excessive in relation to its non-punitive  
               purpose.  (Id. at 449.)

             This bill allows for double punishment for the same offense.  
               A person may be punished after a finding of probable cause  
               that they refused to submit to a chemical test, and then  
               punished again if he or she is convicted of driving under  
               the influence with a special enhancement of refusing to  
               submit to a chemical test. This bill does not give credit  
               to the prior administrative punishment. In addition  
               thereto, the punishment is not remedial in purpose. There  
               is no financial loss by the government when a citizen  
               refuses to submit to a chemical test. 









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             In conclusion, as written, this bill fails all three prongs  
                                      and violates double jeopardy. 
             
           6)Concerns about Prison and Jail Overcrowding and the Threat of  
            a Court-Ordered Population Cap  :  Given this bill creates a new  
            crime and additional punishments, there will likely be an  
            increase in the number of inmates incarcerated in state prison  
            for a longer term.  This being the case, it is important to  
            raise the issue of prison overcrowding.  The California Policy  
            Research Center (CPRC) recently issued a report on the status  
            of California's prisons.  The report stated, "California has  
            the largest prison population of any state in the nation, with  
            more than 171,000 inmates in 33 adult prisons, and the state's  
            annual correctional spending, including jails and probation,  
            amounts to $8.92 billion.  Despite the high cost of  
            corrections, fewer California prisoners participate in  
            relevant treatment programs than comparable states, and its  
            inmate-to-officer ratio is considerably higher.  While the  
            nation's prisons average one correctional officer to every 4.5  
            inmates, the average California officer is responsible for 6.5  
            inmates.  Although officer salaries are higher than average,  
            their ranks are spread dangerously thin and there is a severe  
            vacancy rate."  (Petersilia, "Understanding California  
            Corrections", California Policy Research Center, May 2006).   
            California's prison population will likely exceed 180,000 by  
            2010.

          According to the Little Hoover Commission, "Lawsuits filed in  
            three federal courts alleging that the current level of  
            overcrowding constitutes cruel and unusual punishment ask that  
            the courts appoint a panel of federal judges to manage  
            California's prison population.  United States District Judge  
            Lawrence Karlton, the first judge to hear the motion, gave the  
            State until June 2007 to show progress in solving the  
            overpopulation crisis.  Judge Karlton clearly would prefer not  
            to manage California's prison population.  At a December 2006  
            hearing, Judge Karlton told lawyers representing the  
            Schwarzenegger administration that he is not inclined 'to  
            spend forever running the state prison system.'  However, he  
            also warned the attorneys, 'You tell your client June 4 may be  
            the end of the line.  It may really be the end of the line.'

          "Despite the rhetoric, thirty years of 'tough on crime' politics  
            has not made the state safer. Quite the opposite:  today  
            thousands of hardened, violent criminals are released without  








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            regard to the danger they present to an unsuspecting public.   
            Years of political posturing have taken a good idea -  
            determinate sentencing - and warped it beyond recognition with  
            a series of laws passed with no thought to their cumulative  
            impact. And these laws stripped away incentive s for offenders  
            to change or improve themselves while incarcerated.  

          "Inmates, who are willing to improve their education, learn a  
            job skill or kick a drug habit find that programs are few and  
            far between, a result of budget choices and overcrowding.  
            Consequently, offenders are released into California  
            communities with the criminal tendencies and addictions that  
            first led to their incarceration.  They are ill-prepared to do  
            more than commit new crimes and create new victims . . . . "   
            [Little Hoover Commission Report, "Solving California's  
            Corrections Crisis:  Time is Running Out", pg. 1, 2 (2007).]  

          According to the California Department of Corrections and  
            Rehabilitation, there are approximately 8,000 inmates serving  
            a sentence for lewd and lascivious acts on a child.   
            Incarcerating 8,000 more inmates for a term of  
            25-years-to-life would cripple the corrections system.  

          On February 9, 2009, a United States district court three-judge  
            panel issued a tentative ruling mandating the State of  
            California to resolve chronic prison overcrowding.  In the  
            tentative ruling, the judges state "[t]he evidence is  
            compelling that there is no relief other than a prisoner  
            release order that will remedy the unconstitutional prison  
            conditions."  With prisons housing twice the population they  
            were built to accommodate, the prospect of early release of  
            inmates appears imminent unless the Legislature relieves the  
            current prison population.  Given the untenable legal  
            disparity this bill proposes and the strength of existing law,  
            does it make sense to further contribute to the state's  
            mounting overcrowding problem?

           7)Argument in Support  :  According to the  District Attorney,  
            County of Riverside  (the sponsor of this bill), "There is a  
            growing trend in California for suspected drunk drivers to  
            completely refuse to participate in an investigation when they  
            are suspected of DUI.  These individuals often refuse to  
            answer any questions regarding their alcohol consumption to  
            prevent any blood-level or burn-off calculations.  They refuse  
            to perform field sobriety tests to prevent law enforcement  








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            from objectively evaluating their sobriety, and they refuse to  
            submit to a chemical test, which is the only reliable evidence  
            of their blood or breath alcohol concentrations.  This often  
            times leaves the officer with no proof of the suspect's  
            impairment other than the odor of alcohol and personal  
            observations.

          "Refusal of these tests creates an obvious evidentiary advantage  
            for the defendant where the prosecution must prove actual  
            impairment and/or a blood alcohol level of 0.08% or more.  Law  
            enforcement agencies are reluctant to force a blood draw in  
            these refusal situations for fear of civil liability.  AB 614  
            will eliminate the evidentiary advantage gained by a refusal,  
            by creating a new crime of DUI chemical test refusal,  
            equivalent to penalties for a breathalyzer refusal."

           8)Argument in Opposition  :  According to the  California DUI  
            Lawyers Association  and the  California Attorneys for Criminal  
            Justice  , "Under current law, a person convicted of driving  
            under the influence may receive additional penalties if he/she  
            also refused to submit to a chemical test.  These penalties  
            are available if and only if the person has been proven to  
            have been driving with a blood alcohol level above the legal  
            limit.  Vehicle Code Section 23577.  The objective of this  
            penalty enhancement is to punish someone who refused to comply  
            with the administrative implied consent to submit to a test as  
            a means to conceal the illegal activity of driving while under  
            the influence.

          "By contrast, AB 614 makes it a crime to refuse to submit to a  
            chemical test even if the driver is not driving while under  
            the influence.  Of further concern is that AB 614 imposes the  
            DUI penalties on a driver who is not under the influence even  
            if the BAC percent is 0.00.

          "Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of AB 614 is that it  
            authorizes the imposition of a jail sentence without the right  
            to a jury trial.  Instead, it gives the DMV the authority to  
            impose criminal penalties as the outcome of an administrative  
            proceeding.  AB 614 fails to comply with constitutional  
            requirements, such as the right to counsel, as a prerequisite  
            to imposing criminal penalties."

           REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   









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           Support 
           
          District Attorney, County of Riverside (Sponsor)
          Crime Victims United of California

           Opposition 
           
          California Attorneys for Criminal Justice
          California DUI Lawyers Association
          Taxpayers for Improving Public Safety
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :    Nicole J. Hanson / PUB. S. / (916)  
          319-3744