you are incorrect. The FDA does not ever say it is safe to drive with medicine in you. It warns people it may not be safe and the patient needs to be aware of that and give that possibility due regard.
Well, it does by defacto. It's one of the things the FDA studies with nearly every medicine and unless some threshhold like 80% or 95% of folks are safe drivers while on the medicine, they slap a black box label warning on the medication stating that driving may result in serious injury or death. I did not see that caution, so they discovered a lower threshhold, and if you get an FDA official on the stand, he will have to say that the FDA could not find any evidence showing that the medicine causes unsafe driving for all but a small minority of drivers.
Instead, you get a pharmacist up there to talk about the study and state that they covered 500, maybe 1000 patients, maybe 17 reported problems driving, resulting in the mild warning label, but not one was arrested for DUI due to the medication during the entire course of the study and 500 driving years.
you, again, are misunderstanding the elements of the case. It will come down to a simple: 1. was there drugs in her system at a level that is commonly accepted to have some effect on a typical person. 2. can the officer sustain his statement she was not able to operate a vehicle safely.
Well, the law says that the medication must have caused her to drive the vehicle unsafely. Correlation is not causation. This is basic logic, here. I can be an unsafe driver, and if after I am pulled over, I drink two drops of beer, the beer did not cause me to drive unsafely even though I have a
potentially intoxicating drug in my system and I was driving unsafely at roughly the same times. I might be guilty of open container, but not DUI.
that is all that is needed to prove DUI.
Here is the text of the statute they need to prove beyond all reasonable doubt:
under the influence of any other drug or
combination of drugs to a degree that renders the person incapable of safely driving;
(Emphasis added)
That's all that's needed to get to trial- I agree with you there. To prove the causation beyond all reasonable doubt to a jury? That depends on the jury. Maybe a really trusting jury will buy "medication in system" + "driving badly" means "medication in system"
caused "driving badly". So yes, a jury
can find her guilty. But I think if you've got a couple logical folks on there who read the statute, they're going to want the prosecutor to prove the medication caused the bad driving before saying guilty. Especially when there's a lot of other explanations at 3AM. And it's the prosecutor's job to prove the case.
With all due respect to downstate IL, I'm pretty sure somebody on a Chicago or Suburban jury wouldn't buy it based on only some medication in the person's system and them driving erratically. The specific text of the IL statute is "renders", not "and", so you're not actually guilty unless there's causation rather than correlation.
you are missing the point. Even if she was able to safely operate a vehicle during the day with the level of drugs she had in her body it means nothing. If the drugs combined with her fatigue caused her to not be able to safely operate a vehicle, she is guilty of DUI.
But that certainly is pretty embarassing to anyone trying to prove she was "under the influence of any other drug or combination of drugs to a degree that renders the person incapable of safely driving".
If they couldn't render her incapable of driving safely during the day and anybody would be rendered incapable of driving safely by going for 21 hours without sleep, the drugs didn't render her incapable of driving safely- the lack of sleep did. In order to clear
renders, the prosecutor must either prove that she was capable of safe driving at 3AM without the drugs and incapable of driving with them in her system, or he must prove that she had so much drugs in her system that it would have rendered OP incapable of safe driving even if she were capable in the first place. Based on the wording of the statute, being incapable of driving in the first place because you're really emotional and having a bad day and having taken half a benadryl which wouldn't otherwise render you incapable of safe driving does not appear to constitute a violation of 11‑501.a(4). The way I read it, you either had to be capable of driving safely before taking the benadryl, or you had to have taken so much benadryl after you were an unsafe driver that anyone would be an unsafe driver with that much in their system, regardless of how much they'd taken.
So if the crime lab can't prove the OP had so much medication in her system that anybody would have been rendered incapable of safe driving, the prosecutor has to prove that the OP was capable of safe driving without the medication but became an unsafe driver after the medication beyond all reasonable doubt. And since she was pulled over at 3AM- an hour when most reasonable drivers would be at home asleep and many drivers would be too tired to drive safely, there's not really a presumption she'd be a safe driver without taking the medicine. And that's for the jury to decide on and a smart attorney to point out, anyways.
I would be very cautious of doing that in todays world. As I said previously, several states have specifically included drowsiness or fatigue to be a basis for a charge of unsafe driving.
Unsafe or careless driving is essentially a ticket in Illinois and you can't be tried for the same crime twice after the prosecutor has finalized the DUI charges. I would consider that a great plea deal, though. No jail time, no criminal record, and just a moving violation.
I think we don't have enough facts to make that determination. People tagged with DUI tend to deny they were in fact under the influence of anything. Without the police report and the findings of the officer, we have a very lopsided view of the situation.
You're absolutely right. I tend to lean in favor of the OPs, I guess- they're coming here for help and the only thing I have to go on is what they're telling me.