I have had clients charged by police officers with Driving While Intoxicated, that received a “wet reckless” disposition from the General District Court judge when we kept the BAC certificate out under the 3 hour rule. While this was a good result, we recommended to our client that he appeal the result and take his case to trial in the Circuit Court. My client gets a de novo or brand new trial in the Circuit Court. On appeal, the Circuit Court considers whether the evidence was sufficient to find my client guilty of reckless driving, not DUI, since the charge was already reduced to reckless driving in the General District Court. In the Circuit Court, we’ve had clients get a dismissal of their reckless driving conviction based on the logic below.

Drunk Driving is no Reckless Driving
Photo by Clark Van Der Beken on Unsplash

In Thompson v. Commonwealth (501 S.E.2d 438), the Court of Appeals cited Powers v. Commonwealth, and explained that “[t]he mere happening of an accident does not give rise to an inference of reckless driving.” In Thompson, the Court went on to say that “evidence of intoxication is a factor that might bear upon proof of dangerousness or reckless driving in a given case” but “does not, of itself, prove reckless driving.”

The Court reasoned that “One may be both drunk and reckless … [or] reckless though not drunk… [, or] under the influence of intoxicants and yet drive carefully.” (Note: You also can not be guilty of BOTH reckless driving and DUI for acts arising out of the same incident.)

Even if we assume that a defendant was intoxicated at the time of the traffic stop, this establishes little else. The Commonwealth needs to prove every essential element of the offense of reckless driving and prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant was driving recklessly. The Commonwealth needs to show that there is no reasonable hypothesis of innocence. It can not speculate and conjecture as to what caused a defendant to lose control of his car.

In one of my cases, even the prosecutor at the General District Court agreed that my client was not guilty of reckless driving even though there was a single vehicle accident and evidence of intoxication. We had appealed the General District Court outcome, but we did not even need to take the case to trial to win in the Circuit Court. Every case has its own particular facts and circumstances. Please speak with a traffic defense attorney to prepare your best defense today.

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