You're talking about the DUI charge, which as we can see didn't stick.
No, I'm not talking about the DUI charge and neither is the poster. He's talking about his upcoming MVA hearing about the REFUSAL for the test. I gave the EXACT standard of the Maryland implied consent law. All it takes is that the officer has reasonable belief that the guy was driving.
My comments were to specifically to correct your INCORRECT statement that the person must have been operating the vehicle in order for the implied consent to apply.
Sometimes common sense needs to rear its head here. Suspending a license of someone for refusing a breathalyzer who WASN'T in their vehicle and clearly hadn't been for some time is beyond ridiculous.
You're making great leaps here which subsequent clarification of the poster has born out.
The poster:
1. Was intoxicated.
2. Had constructive possesion of the vehicle (they keys were in it and apparently he was in or near the vehicle).
That would appear to raise a reasonable suspicion.
He can, as I already stated, challenge whether that suspicion was reasonable, but I suspect since his own lawyer, who is in more possession of the facts of the case here having already defended the CRIMINAL charge, recommended that he take the suspension (and enter the interlock program to get a restricted license) that he feels that it's unlikely that the challenge the validity of the breathalizer test is going to be successful at the DMV.