This is mostly a curiosity question. I recently received my first DUI in NC and am required to have a Alcohol Interlock Device for a year (plus my license is suspended for a year). I am guilty and have to suffer the consequences.
The law plays out in my case in a very strange way. After 45 days I can apply for a 'Limited Driving Privilege'. This would limit my driving to a car with a Interlock on it and would further limit my driving only to/from work and to/from the Interlock Device testing facility. Since I am retired the only driving that I could do is to/from the testing facility. But it still is in my best interest to install the device, because I have to have it on a car for a year even if I wait until my suspension period is up. So my choices are to have the device on a car that I cannot drive (and get the device calibrated/downloaded monthly or bi-monthly) and once my suspension is up I can 'drive normally again'. Or I can just not bother now with the device but will have to put up with it when I start driving again.
Since I do not currently own a car, the obvious choice of putting the device 'on now when I cannot drive' is a goodly sized incremental expense. It would be nice if I could buy a junker that would barely pass inspection and just leave it parked at the interlock facilities for regular testing - from all that I know (I have talked to two attorneys on this) that would suffice and 'the powers that be would be happy'. But I don't think it would work with the Interlock folks
This is almost like something out of Alice in Wonderland. I was wondering if this kind of strange sounding scenario could happen in other states. Like I said it is mostly a curiosity thing.
Thanks.
ps. Just a fascinating question. What kind of car do you buy if you do not intend to drive it?
The law plays out in my case in a very strange way. After 45 days I can apply for a 'Limited Driving Privilege'. This would limit my driving to a car with a Interlock on it and would further limit my driving only to/from work and to/from the Interlock Device testing facility. Since I am retired the only driving that I could do is to/from the testing facility. But it still is in my best interest to install the device, because I have to have it on a car for a year even if I wait until my suspension period is up. So my choices are to have the device on a car that I cannot drive (and get the device calibrated/downloaded monthly or bi-monthly) and once my suspension is up I can 'drive normally again'. Or I can just not bother now with the device but will have to put up with it when I start driving again.
Since I do not currently own a car, the obvious choice of putting the device 'on now when I cannot drive' is a goodly sized incremental expense. It would be nice if I could buy a junker that would barely pass inspection and just leave it parked at the interlock facilities for regular testing - from all that I know (I have talked to two attorneys on this) that would suffice and 'the powers that be would be happy'. But I don't think it would work with the Interlock folks
This is almost like something out of Alice in Wonderland. I was wondering if this kind of strange sounding scenario could happen in other states. Like I said it is mostly a curiosity thing.
Thanks.
ps. Just a fascinating question. What kind of car do you buy if you do not intend to drive it?