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| | Can You Be Ticketed If Your Blood Alcohol Is Below The Legal Limit? | | | Yes. First, many states make it illegal for a minor (any person below the legal drinking age) to have any significant blood alcohol content while driving a car. (The threshold is usually set around 0.02%, to allow for mechanical error and the use of medications or mouthwash, which may artificially inflate the BAC.) Second, the key issue is whether your consumption of alcohol materially impaired your ability to drive. Some people have a low tolerance level for alcohol, and show the effects of intoxication even when they are below the "legal limit." Additionally, if you are taking certain medications, the effects of alcohol can be magnified. The police will sometimes seek a court order for a drug test, particularly if they suspect illegal drug use as the cause of your impairment. However, whether the drugs you take are legal or not, if the net effect of the drugs and alcohol is to substantially impair your ability to drive, you can be charged with "drunk driving." Also, some prescription drugs have a material effect on your ability to drive - the warning label on your pill bottle may specifically warn you not to drive after taking your medication. If you ignore this warning, and your driving is impaired by the medication, you can be ticketed for driving while impaired - even though you never consumed alcohol. |
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The Section of Litigation is pleased to present audio recordings of the Honorable Sandra Day O'Connor who spoke on January 9, 2009 in Scottsdale, AZ to a plenary gathering of Section members. Justice O'Connor led a panel discussion concerning state court judicial campaign contributions and disqualification, a subject of great interest to the legal community in light of Caperton v. Massey, currently pending before the United States Supreme Court and on which oral arguments were heard on March 2, 2009.
September 24–25, 2009. Join us for the National Conference for the Minority Lawyer, sponsored by the ABA Business Law Section, ABA Section of Litigation and the Commission on Ethnic and Racial Diversity in the Profession.
The Section of Litigation is pleased to present audio recordings of the Honorable Sandra Day O'Connor who spoke on January 9, 2009 in Scottsdale, AZ to a plenary gathering of Section members. Justice O'Connor led a panel discussion concerning state court judicial campaign contributions and disqualification, a subject of great interest to the legal community in light of Caperton v. Massey, currently pending before the United States Supreme Court and on which oral arguments were heard on March 2, 2009.
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