NTL Record

Title Refusal of Intoxication Testing: A Report to Congress
Record ID 30703
Personal Name
Creator
Berning, Amy; Compton, Richard; Vegega, Maria; Beirness, Douglas J.; Hedlund, James H.; Jones, Ralph K.; Nichols, James L.
Source 28p. in various pagings
Publisher United States. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Office of Behavioral Safety Research
Publication Date 20080900
Language English
Abstract When a driver is stopped on suspicion of impaired driving, a series of steps takes place, including the request from a law enforcement officer for a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) test. The most typical request is for a breath sample, but blood or urine samples can be requested. In contrast to being stopped by an officer for other driving violations, the result of an impaired driving stop may dramatically impact a person’s life. The driver faces an arrest, possible jail time, expensive fines, increased insurance costs, loss of their driver’s license, and a criminal record. Thus, the driver’s decision whether to provide the breath test has serious consequences. This report discusses the important issue of breath test refusals. It begins with a short background on the impaired driving problem and the issue of missing BAC information for both drivers arrested for impaired driving and drivers involved in fatal or serious injury crashes. Next, various laws governing impaired driving and the role of BAC test information under those laws are reviewed. That is followed by a brief overview of the DWI arrest process to provide a foundation for the discussion of refusals. The results of several recent studies examining the breath test refusal issue, including breath test refusal rates in 2005, and a comparison to rates in 1987 and 2001 are presented; followed by the effect of refusals on prosecution and adjudication of DWI cases; next is a description of a promising strategy to decrease refusals – the use of search warrants for bloods draws. The report concludes with recommendations that would decrease the incidence of missing BAC data.
Rosap ID dot:1873
Rosap URL https://rosap.ntl.bts.gov/view/dot/1873
TRT Terms Intoxication; Blood alcohol levels; Drunk drivers; Law enforcement
General Subjects Breath Test Refusal; DWI; DUI; Implied consent; Search warrant; BAC; Blood alcohol concentration
Classification NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - Human Factors;
NTL - SAFETY AND SECURITY - SAFETY AND SECURITY
Geographical
Coverage
United States
OCLC 456689858
Report Number DOT HS 811 098
Availability NHTSA - Behavioral Safety Research
Resource type Research Paper
URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/30000/30700/30703/811098.pdf
Alternative URL https://ntlrepository.blob.core.windows.net/lib/30000/30700/30703/5572-RefusalsReportToCongress2-12-09_v1.doc
Format PDF
Database NTL Digital Repository