Proposed DWI Deferred Will Only Feel Better for 1st Timers

January 18, 2011

By Dallas and Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 562-7549

texasdefensefirm.com

The 2011 Texas Legislature has a bill before it that would give 1st time DWI offenders the opportunity to get Deferred Adjudication according to this Dallas Morning News article. What can a first-time DWI arrestee expect in this bill crafted by Texas Prosecutors and MADD in exchange for pleading guilty?  Not much.

Remember, Deferred is where someone pleads guilty but the Court defers the finding of guilt while the person completes probation.  If the person completes probation successfully, then the charges are “dismissed” without a final conviction ever being attained.  I put the term dismissed in quotes because even though that’s the term used by the statute, the legislature gave it a special definition that most people speaking English would derive from it’s use — it’s really only a document confirming probation is over.

When someone completes deferred and their case is “dismissed,” then the person’s arrest record, court records, and probation records stay completely in tact and are routinely sold to private companies for public uses on job search applications, housing applications, or loan applications (etc.).  Only when someone applies for a petition for non-disclosure two years after the “dismissal” AND a Judge determines it is in the best interests of justice can the person’s file not be sold by the State.  But law enforcement, of course, gets to keep it and share it with practically any other entity that is affiliated with the State such as school boards and professional licensing agencies.

And according to the Dallas Morning News Article, the DWI Deferred proposal has even less benefit than a normal deferred.  For this program, if you plead guilty and get deferred it counts as a conviction for the purposes of enhancement.  Also there seems to be no other lessening of punishment in any way as far as interlock devices or sur-charges.

Prosecutors and MADD miss the point with this deferred proposal.  The reason deferred would help clear the dockets is that it would give an accused something to actually lose by contesting the charges.  About the only benefit with this proposed law is that someone can say they’ve never been convicted of DWI.  I guess that’s something, but it doesn’t do much more than make someone feel a little less guilty if they accept responsibility for a DWI that they’re guilty of.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article is intended to be legal advice.  For legal advice about any situation you should contact an attorney directly.


Dallas Morning News DWI Series

August 16, 2010

By Dallas and Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy F. Rosenthal

(972) 562-7549

texasdefensefirm.com

The Dallas Morning News is running a series of articles about DWI’s as they relate to the criminal justice system August 14, 15, and 16, 2010.  You can read today’s article here.

Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with the article’s point of view it is informative nonetheless as the staff authors Diane Jennings, Selwyn Crawford and Darlean Spangenberger have clearly done their homework in interviewing prosecutors, judges, and criminal defense lawyers alike.  What I think they’re missing is that this problem has 10-sides… not just 3.

My chief complaint (this is MY blog after all), is that both yesterday’s and today’s article assume anyone accused of an intoxication offense is, in fact, guilty.  From that starting point, it is understandable then that it appears anyone and everyone that gets a result short of a full-fledged flogging is somehow cheating the system.  Let’s not forget this is a county known for sending innocent people to prison.

I am glad to see the concept of deferred adjudication enter the conversation, however, as one of the main problems with the Courts dealing with DWI’s is the all-or-nothing position people accused of DWIs face on a daily basis.  Giving the accused a middle ground gives them something to lose by fighting the charges and in my opinion would be a major step towards clearing the dockets.

One suggestion by Richard Alpert (a Tarrant County Prosecutor known state-wide as an authority on prosecuting DWI) suggests in today’s article that if the legislature is going to consider deferred for DWI cases that they at least be able to enhance subsequent DWI’s as if the previous deferred was a conviction.  Sadly, this is exactly what makes deferred adjudication a trap-door in other cases.  Essentially it would be deferred in name only — and as I joke with my clients — it only feels good to get deferred.

But I digress… if you’re interested in the topic, the DMN series is a decent enough read.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article should be considered legal advice.  For legal advice for any specific situation you should contact an attorney directly.