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Articles Posted in OUI / DUI Appeals / Constitutional Challenges

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Ambulance or EMT Records Ruled Admissible in Massachusetts OUI/DUI Trials

The defendant in Commonwealth v. Palacios claimed that the ambulance records should not have been admitted against her at his OUI/DUI trial and that references to her intoxication should have been redacted.  The Massachusetts Appeals Court, however, concluded that the ambulance records were properly admitted as records of medical services.…

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Massachusetts Appeals Court Throws Out OUI/DUI Case for “No Fix” Violation

The Massachusetts Appeals Court recently affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of an OUI/DUI indictment because of the Commonwealth’s violation of the “No-Fix Law”. In the case of Commonwealth v. Burnham, the appeals court upheld the trial court’s dismissal where the defendant did not receive prompt and definite notice of the…

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SJC Says Police May Not Offer Opinion of Impairment in OUI / DUI Cases

In a recent decision the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that in cases where a defendant is charged with Operating Under the Influence of Alcohol, a police officer may not offer an opinion at trial as to whether the driver’s ability was diminished by the consumption of alcohol or that…

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Refusal to Perform Field Sobriety Tests Can’t be Used At Trial…Well, It Depends…

As far as Massachusetts Drunk Driving trials go, prosecutors are not able to introduce to a jury evidence that the driver refused to perform any field sobriety tests. But what about the scenario where the driver initially agreed to perform field sobriety tests and then decided to stop? The Massachusetts…

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Breathalyzer Refusal Not Admissible to Jury, Even at Defendant’s Reqeust

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court recently decided a legal issue in Massachusetts Drunk Driving Cases involving the proposed admission of a defendant’s refusal to submit to a Breathalyzer Test. In the case of Commonwealth v. William H. Jones, Jr., the defendant was charged and proceeded to jury trial on the…

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Massachusetts Supreme Court Ruling Rejects Registar’s Definition of “Conviction”

In the recent case of Paul J. Souza v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rejected the Registrar of Motor Vehicle’s definition of “conviction” and ruled that a conviction means only dispositions of criminal charges where a determination of guilt was made. The plaintiff in this case…

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Admission at Trial of Expert Forensic Testimony in Massachusetts Drunk Driving Cases

The Massachusetts Appeals Court recently decided the case of Commonwealth v. McGrail, where that defendant was tried and convicted of OUI / DUI, and Leaving the Scene of an Accident. In that case, it was alleged that the defendant was involved in an accident, but was located by police about…

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Massachusetts Police Can’t Justify Drunk Driving Charges on License Plate Violations

The Massachusetts Supreme Court recently ruled that police cannot justify the stop of a vehicle on the basis of an obscured license plate slogan, and in the process, threw out the DUI / OUI charges the driver was arrested for. In the case of Commonwealth v. Miller, a Massachusetts State…

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