Insurance3 mins ago
Drinking and Driving
7 Answers
When first introduced in the early seventies, the law required a motorist to have committed a moving traffic offence before he/she could be stopped and asked to give a breath sample. Random breath tests were not allowed. What is the current situation. Has the law changed, or are the Police bending the rules?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The law has changed since those early days.An officer can demand a breath sample if he suspects that you have been drinking.The police are allowed to stop traffic.As the cases stand there is now nothing to prevent the police stopping every car and, on suspecting then that the driver has been drinking, demand a breath test.Of course, in the 'old days' the police were quite happy to treat anything and everything as either a moving traffic offence or as grounds for thinking that the driver was driving under the influence ! In the very early days you could demand trial by jury and be acquitted because they all felt sympathetic, whatever your technical defence was. Times have changed, that right has gone and the law is much stricter and simpler.
If the officer requires you to provide a breath sample and you refuse then you are liable for arrest/report for summons - if convicted you will get a ban and fine.
You can be required to provide a sample following a moving traffic offence, if you are involved in a accident, or if the officer suspects you of being under the influence.
Legally you can be stopped with no reason (The Road Traffic Act makes it an offence not to stop when required to do so) although usually there will be some sort of reason.
However if you are simply invited to then it would be different.
Be straightforward and polite and ask if you are required to provide a sample. If the answer is yes then take it. If not then say you would like to decline if it is voluntary. However, refusal because you don't drink isn't a defense in law.
Some people who are asthmatic can't provide breath samples and will get arretsed - a sample of blood or urine is then "required" at the police station and as long as one of those samples is provided the "refusal" will not be proceeded with.
You can be required to provide a sample following a moving traffic offence, if you are involved in a accident, or if the officer suspects you of being under the influence.
Legally you can be stopped with no reason (The Road Traffic Act makes it an offence not to stop when required to do so) although usually there will be some sort of reason.
However if you are simply invited to then it would be different.
Be straightforward and polite and ask if you are required to provide a sample. If the answer is yes then take it. If not then say you would like to decline if it is voluntary. However, refusal because you don't drink isn't a defense in law.
Some people who are asthmatic can't provide breath samples and will get arretsed - a sample of blood or urine is then "required" at the police station and as long as one of those samples is provided the "refusal" will not be proceeded with.