Tell me - did you read the KANSAS statute before posting this?Joi in Arizona said:I am not positive, but I think that refusing to take field sobriety tests or the PBT is not grounds for suspending your license. It is refusing a BAC test or blood test once at the station that will be grounds for suspension. A PBT can only be used to show the officer had probable cause to believe the driver was intoxicated. The results can not be introduced in court. I don't think refusing to take a PBT can be used in court the same way refusing to take a BAC test or blood test once at the station can be used.
I am not familar with every states DUI laws or the case law that dictates certain outcomes at trial.
Well, I glanced at it and I can't find where it is a crime not to do FSTs or blow in the preliminary device. Keep in mind that the PBT is NOT the state mandated test.Zigner said:Tell me - did you read the KANSAS statute before posting this?
I doubt you could charge obstruction for not taking the FSTs or blowing into a PBT ... but, different states have different laws.midnightduipro said:Did he actually get charged with d.u.i., or just obstruction? Obstruction is all that was mentioned in the post and that wouldn't usually require any further BAC testing.
That may be true in some state somewhere, but in the ones I know the only thing that a driver is required to do under 'implied consent' is to take a chemical test if arrested for DUI. I know of at least one state that creates a seperate offense not to blow in the field device (aka PBT or PAS), but even that state does not require that you submit to FSTs.comet3 said:When you apply for a driver's license, you automatically waive the right to refuse sobriety tests. If you refuse field sobriety tests, you'll then be taken in a blood test, if you refuse that, you are arrested.
Perfectly legal.ksjane said:He was pulled over for speeding, but they didn't pull him over until he was pulling in my driveway.
Unless there is a law requiring him to blow (and I don't think there is in KS), he did not have to. And even if he had to, he could still refuse and face the consequences.They got his DL and ins. and ran all that--all fine. Asked him to do a PBT and he refused.
Odd, but I suppose that might be the law in KS.They said if he refused the PBT they would take him to jail on obstruction. They wrote him the ticket, handed it to me and took him to jail. They told me he was being arrested for obstruction, how much the bond would be and where he could be picked up.
They can charge him with anything. Convicting him is a whole other matter.I just dont understand how they can actually charge him with a DUI just from this process.
You may have witnessed the contact in the driveway, but you do not know what happened before that. You also may not have made the same observations of impairment that the officers did. One can be DUI without being a stumbling drunk. I have seen people blow a .22 and do decently enough on the FSTs that I thought they might be .07 or .08!I can certainly understand why some might assume that there is something missing from this whole ordeal, I might think so myself if I hadn't witnessed it all first hand.