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Evaluating Georgia
DUI Attorneys for Your Case |
By: William C. Head, Attorney at
Law
In 1970, a drunk driving (DUI) conviction was not
treated by Georgia law as a very serious matter. Many cases
were disposed on in local courts and never reported to the State.
Often the fines would be $100 or less, and no jail time would
be handed down. Most drivers never even lost their full
driving privileges.
Today, few criminal offenses that you, as a hard-working,
taxpaying citizen could realistically face being prosecuted for
in Georgia carry more long-term problems than a D.U.I. conviction.
Georgia law now carries MANDATORY jail for virtually 100% of offenders,
and a GUARANTEED loss of your GA license (or the privilege to
drive in this state, for people who hold a license from a different
state.) Plus, probation is mandatory for 12 months on all
misdemeanor DUI cases in Georgia, as is community service.
While a driving under the influence arrest starts
series of complex and embarrassing consequences for most people,
the disastrous and infinitely more stressful consequences of pleading
guilty or losing at trial make the arrest seem very mild by comparison.
A conviction for drunk driving or drugged driving in Georgia can
lead to loss of driving privileges, mandatory jail time, lengthy
community service hours, possible alcohol or drug treatment, possible
ignition interlock device installation on your vehicles, financial
devastation caused by employment problems, and possible cataclysmic
personal upheaval (i.e., divorce, loss of visitation rights, loss
of a college scholarship, inability to travel to certain countries).
Over 85% of all people charged with impaired driving
(alcohol or drugs) never hire an attorney skilled in fighting
these high-difficulty criminal cases. Many who opt to hire
someone do not even seek a lawyer who is an expert in the field
of driving while intoxicated cases. Some attorneys do not
investigate the facts of the case, to see if the case has a possibility
(or even a PROBABILITY) of being won, through a reduced plea (not
a DUI) or a successful trial.
Failing to fight these seemingly impossible cases
(and sustaining a conviction on your criminal record) can lead
to nightmarish scenarios for you. Seeing these dire consequences,
and wanting to avoid them, more and more citizens accused of impaired
driving offenses are diligently searching for TOP trial attorneys
who specialize in challenging Georgia’s charges in these
life-changing criminal cases. They want the very best legal specialist
they can find to fight their D.U.I. case.
This article will explain how you can do your own
investigation regarding the best legal talent for your DUI prosecution
in GA, and determine which Georgia law firm or which particular
attorney in Georgia has the best chance of helping you get a good
result in your DUI case. These ideas are the product of
over 30 years of observation of the competitive world of DUI law
in Georgia.
Many questions arise as we address this issue.
Here are 10 questions that will all be answered later in the body
of this article?
1. Q: Does everyone
NEED an attorney when charged with DUI? How do you select the
right drinking and driving lawyer?
2. Q: Aren’t
all Georgia “attorneys” equal by all being admitted
to practice in this state?
3. Q: How can one
attorney charge so much, and others charge what seems to be a
clearly insufficient amount, and they say they are both going
to “represent” me?
4. Q: Isn’t
a DUI case just like any other criminal trial?
5. Q: If I am financially
unable to hire an attorney who specializes in these cases, can
I get an appointed lawyer?
6. Q: Are public defenders
(appointed attorneys) as knowledgeable, capable and successful
as private attorneys who are at the top of this area of criminal
law?
7. Q: Won’t
the fact that I am a GOOD person, with no prior criminal history
make my chances of getting the DUI dropped or reduced a virtual
certainty?
8. Q: Even if I plead
guilty to DUI, can’t I wait 5 years or possibly a little
longer for this to be “off my record” or expunged
from my driving records?
9. Q: I know
a lot of people who have influence in the community. Can’t
I just ask some powerful friends to “pull a few strings”
and get this thing dropped?
10. Q: If I have some money, but not enough
to hire the top DUI lawyer in Georgia, can I get a quality attorney?
Hopefully, this article will help you to analyze
all these questions and give you better direction as to whether
and why you should hire a specialist in fighting DUI cases. Let's
start at the beginning.
Do you need an attorney?
The old saying "He who represents himself has
a fool for a lawyer" applies to drunk driving law just like
it does for most other legal matters. Impaired driving law (alcohol
or drugs) is one of the most politically sensitive areas of the
American legal system. Although most DUI cases are misdemeanor
offenses, the consequences for a conviction can often parallel
or exceed some felony punishment. Hence, handling one of these
cases without legal counsel can be a life-changing mistake.
Judges fear being defeated in political races based
on being "soft" on crime, especially driving while intoxicated
[DUI] cases. Police officers are often promoted and given favorable
duty based on their "track record" in arresting and
prosecuting drunken drivers. MADD has become a formidable political
and social juggernaut in America, and has its financial tentacles
in various levels of federal, state and local government. Many
"hanging" judges get the majority of their financial
backing from M.A.D.D. and its supporters. In large part, many
police departments and courts depend upon state and federal grants
and the revenues from D.U.I. convictions to stay afloat. Recently,
legislation piling on excessive surcharges in DUI cases has become
a new source of revenue for cash-starved state budgets in Texas,
New Jersey and other states. In 2001, Georgia tripled much
of its minimum punishments for repeat offenders.
Therefore, it is not surprising that tremendous
financial resources from the state and federal governments have
been amassed to detect, evaluate, arrest, prosecute and punish
DUI suspects across Georgia. Numerous branches of the federal
government are deeply involved in trying to deter and punish DUI
offenders, and every state has special agencies that are an extension
of the Governor's office that monitor progress in the never-ending
fight to thwart drunken and drugged driving from occurring. In
Georgia, this office is designated "The Governor's Office
of Highway Safety".
Additionally, DUI-DWI cases are among the most difficult
criminal law cases in the United States to succeed in defending
due to the "scientific" issues that permeate this area
of criminal practice. While a Georgia attorney handling a simple
battery (such as domestic violence) or murder case may be able
to rely on top trial practice skills and a general knowledge of
the rules of evidence and criminal procedure, the Georgia drunk
driving specialist must be fully versed on breath testing instruments
(hand-held and evidentiary devices at the police station or inside
the “mobile” van that accompanies the DUI Task Force
officers), basic electronics, radio frequency interference, flaws
in breath testing “collection” procedure, human anatomy
and physiology, pharmacology, “human factors” analysis
(a part of the field of psychology), statistical analysis and
pharmacokinetics. The attorney must also be trained to be able
to understand the job of a registered nurse, EMS/EMT or phlebotomist
who drew blood, as well as the role of a laboratory toxicologist
when dealing with blood tests and urine tests involving alcohol,
drugs or a combination of alcohol and drugs in impaired driving
cases.
Further, a body of law has evolved around so-called
"field sobriety testing" that is almost always utilized
by Georgia police officers in evaluating possibly impaired drivers
in deciding on whether to arrest the person for D.U.I. These evaluations
are OPTIONAL and VOLUNTARY, yet almost all officers “trick”
or mislead citizens into believing these were “required”
tests. This misrepresented, pseudo-science has been responsible
for more wrongful arrests and convictions than any other voodoo
forensic science in America, far surpassing all erroneous, bogus
eyewitness identification arrests and convictions.
The criminal attorney handling drunk driving litigation
must be knowledgeable of "human factors" affecting such
variables as stress during physical agility testing, environmental
distractions such as strobe or rotating emergency lights, surface
irregularities and obstacles and lighting deficiencies involving
these agility exercises. Additionally, a DUI defender must
be familiar with the dynamics of an officer’s ambiguous
verbal instructions, or of an officer’s poor execution of
a field evaluation “demonstration”. All of these
matters affect your execution of psychophysical evaluations promulgated
and allegedly "validated" by NHTSA (part of our federal
government).
While books about DUI law and attorney web sites
hawking their skills in handling drunk driving defense are ubiquitous
on the Internet, it could be a grave mistake to rely entirely
upon these sources for legal advice relating to successfully defending
your D.U.I. case. All of these Internet sites and sources of information
provide copious amounts of data and "hype" to the citizen
facing a criminal conviction and possible jail sentence, but may
not in any fashion identify a truly skilled DUI lawyer in GA.
Why?
Consider the following points:
1. These sources have no little or no responsibility
or liability for information they provide, and typically disclaim
such responsibility in writing.
2. Many attorneys who have launched web sites are
NOT skilled in fighting DUI cases, but want a volume DUI business
to allow them to handle guilty pleas in large numbers in order
to increase their bottom line. Often, these lawyers' practices
are known as "bait-and-switch" shops, referring to the
front-end assurances of their successful track records, "connections"
to judges or prosecutors within the courts, prior prosecutorial
(or even judicial) experience and very convincing promises of
fighting a D.U.I. case to the last breath in his or her body.
To the utter shock of many trusting clients, their "gladiator"
later changes to yellow-bellied skink, giving a later report to
you of "gloom and doom" or "I have bad news"
that ultimately leads to the lawyer pushing the accused DUI offender
into accepting what knowledgeable Georgia attorneys call a "slow
GUILTY plea" to the drunk driving or drugged driving charges.
Many lawyers in the DUI arena, unfortunately, opt for this type
of practice rather than let a jury or judge decide cases that
they have been hired by you to handle. This culprit is the most
dangerous and difficult to detect in the DUI defense business.
3. Seeing that a specific legal defense in a reported
appellate case or trial was successful for another person (by
reading about it in a book or on-line) in no way prepares the
average lay person (citizen) who is untrained in law to properly
raise and assert that defense in court, much less fight a knowledgeable
prosecutor in court. Often, the winning DUI client had one of
the best lawyers in the business helping him or her. To act as
your own attorney in DUI litigation is a mismatch, plain and simple.
Much like reading a book or Internet site about successful abdominal
surgery, you would not want to slice yourself open to try to cure
your medical defect!
4. Individual case situations in DUI law differ
dramatically, and even the most hopeless looking DWI cases can
be winners, if the attorney is a specialist in the field of "drunk
driving defense" (or "DUI defense", as it is commonly
called). Conversely, even the simplest looking D.U.I. prosecution
with a low alcohol test result and a roadblock arrest (i.e., no
bad driving) can result in a conviction, especially when a person
tries to fight a legally-trained prosecuting attorney who has
been trained by the state of Georgia at special “boot camps”
held every summer.
5. DUI arrests that lead to criminal convictions
can have a lifetime of reoccurring or isolated consequences that
can be devastating to the offender, including loss of job opportunities,
disqualification for public office, restrictions on travel to
other countries, disqualification for certain positions, loss
of college scholarships, being turned down for professional schools,
loss of acting as a sports or athletic “volunteer”
for a youth or church group, embarrassment in social or business
matters that could result in either termination of employment
or scuttling valued relationships. In some instances, it
could possibly cost the person millions of dollars in potential
income.
Even if you could manage to succeed in identifying
the legal issue that might set you free, your lack of experience
in courtroom proceedings could lead to mistakes that could cost
you a victory, thereby squandering your one chance that you had
to walk away from a DUI-DWI conviction. If you seek to hire a
lawyer after you have botched your defense, your early mistakes
will almost always limit your options to appeal. Drunk driving
defense specialists are likely to either DECLINE to step into
a mishandled case or (if they do) will charge more than the usual
fee to try to clean up the mess.
A good drunken driving defense attorney should be
able to give you an honest and thorough assessment of your case
after reviewing the facts and be able to explain the options that
are available to you based on not only the current law, but also
on potential legal changes that are in the legislative and judicial
pipeline at any given time. Often, new legal challenges are in
the process of being pursued in the appellate courts, and ONLY
a drunk driving law specialist would know about these cutting-edge
legal attacks and be able to structure your case and its pleadings
(written motions and other maneuvers) to take advantage of such
transitions in the law of your state.
The Georgia DUI specialist can then work with you
to prepare your case and represent you at your administrative
license suspension hearing and your pending criminal case. In
some situations, the lawyer may be able to explain to the prosecutor
why your case deserves to be dropped or reduced to a lesser charge.
Be aware that in some instances, revelation by your attorney of
such facts too early may jeopardize your chances at trial, in
the event the prosecutor realizes that his or her case has a missing
witness or item of evidence. So, if your DUI expert attorney
advises that such information NOT be disclosed, follow his or
her recommendation.
The drunk driving defense specialist often has additional
specialized training and has access to knowledgeable professional
resources (e.g., expert witnesses, sources of scientific evidence,
private investigators) available to call upon in finding answers
to these difficult and highly politicized criminal law matters.
General practice attorneys typically do not have such resources
available, since their practices are not focused on fighting and
winning DUI cases.
Is it significant that a lawyer calls himself or
herself a "DUI Attorney", "DWI Lawyer" or
"Drunk Driving Defense" guru?
Any person who has passed the Bar in a state can
call himself or herself a DUI or DWI Lawyer (Attorney). Since
drunk driving cases are among the most lucrative criminal matters
to handle, many legal practitioners claim to "specialize"
in this area of law in order to attract potential clients. In
no way does this indicate that the person is necessarily proficient
at obtaining reduced charges (a non-DUI disposition) or an acquittal
of the drunk driving (or drugged driving) offenses through competently
handling trial.
The advent of legal marketing on the Internet, multiple
phone directories, radio, billboards, radio ads and “shows”
and other media sources has led to some attorneys being excellent
marketers, but poor DUI lawyers. One Atlanta attorney that I saw
in the former City Court of Atlanta in September of 1993 who was
a HUGE yellow page advertiser (his yellow page claim to fame was
“As Seen on TV”) was in court to plead all 104 of
his clients guilty or nolo contendere to DUI (nolo contendere
is a form of guilty plea that still counted as a DUI conviction).
He finished all 104 cases in one day and (according to him) pocketed
more than $250,000 for his "efforts". I had 17 files
for 17 clients, and pleaded all of them "not guilty".
By contrast, only one of my 17 clients ultimately ended up with
a DUI on his/her record. It took three months for that court to
schedule all those trials for my clients due to some of my other
trials (in different courts) having priority.
This article is being offered to assist you in screening,
evaluating and possibly eliminating a candidate who is vying to
be the DUI lawyer for your case. If you merely wish to plead guilty
and suffer the consequences, this may be a service that you can
perform entirely on your own, without the assistance of ANY attorney.
Hence, the balance of this article will focus on what questions
to ask of your potential DUI TRIAL attorney in order to determine
what legal services, if any, you will be expecting him or her
to perform on your behalf to FIGHT the charges.
If the lawyer you are considering cannot pass the
"litmus test" of being a qualified Georgia DUI specialist
(as explained in this article), you should look further for legal
help, if you plan to try to WIN your case. If you have already
hired a lawyer for your case, and you realize that the choice
you made was wrong, this article may help you understand some
of your options for changing lawyers.
What to look for in your lawyer
A number of factors should be considered when investigating
the quality of a potential Georgia drunk driving defense lawyer.
With more than 1500 so-called “criminal defense attorneys”
practicing law across the state of Georgia (and over 1000 more
“dabbling” at occasionally representing clients),
the process of selecting the right GA lawyer can be difficult.
Only about 30 lawyers in the entire state are "the best"
in their geographic areas in defending drunk driving cases. Hence,
you will need to eliminate 99% of the avowed Georgia criminal
lawyers to find the ONE "best" attorney for your pending
DUI case.
The following list of factors may prove helpful
in making your decision:
1. Specialized Membership or Professional Affiliations
- This is a good starting point to consider an attorney's "involvement"
and "commitment" to the field of DUI defense. What specialized
professional membership standing does he or she maintain? Although
these memberships are often only a matter of paying certain periodic
fees and being admitted as an attorney in some state, affiliation
may be indicative of the attorney's dedication to the field of
DUI defense. Also, within certain organizations, lower levels
of membership are more a matter of paying the fee, while the top
attorneys are often found in special "founding member",
"life member" or similar "special status"
categories.
In the DUI defense field, here are some places to
examine to determine "proficiency":
a. NCDD.com - National College for DUI Defense,
Inc. - The Regents and Fellows (retired Regents) are attorneys
with an average of 25 years' experience who have been invited
to join the highest ranks of attorneys. The 100 Founding Members
(all Regents were Founding Members) and the later-admitted Sustaining
Members are eligible to become a Regent. Sustaining Members must
be "recommended" for inclusion within the Sustaining
Member echelon by at least a Regent and then "voted in"
by the Regents. Generally, the Regents defer to the Regent or
Fellow (former Dean of the College) from the proposed Sustaining
Member's state for a "thumbs up", or not. This group
(NCDD) now offers Board Certification of members who are able
to pass a grueling written and oral exam about breath testing,
human physiology, field sobriety testing, criminal procedure and
the rules of evidence. The regular members are licensed attorneys
who pay the regular member's annual dues, and may be among the
best lawyers in their state or may not be among the best in their
state. Paying the annual assessment obtains this "regular
member" status and proves nothing more than that. Look further
for other indicia of "skill" versus merely joining a
group that may give the DUI defender a web link or visible credential.
b. NACDL.org - The National Association of Criminal
Defense Lawyers - For more than 40 years, the leading national
directory of CRIMINAL DEFENSE ATTORNEYS in America. Notice that
this covers ALL criminal defense - federal, state, tribal and
both felonies and misdemeanors. Many lawyers in this great organization
are fine DUI-DWI defense specialists, while others take no DUI
cases at all. Life Membership signifies dedication to the field
of criminal defense, but does not necessarily identify skill level
in fighting DUI cases. Dig deeper, and look for other indicia
of dedication to this field.
c. State NACDL affiliates - Many states and even
a few large metropolitan cities have formed local affiliate branches
of the NACDL. See list at this link. I am a "Life" member
of both the GACDL.org and the SCACDL.org (Georgia's and South
Carolina's state affiliates). However, I have successfully handled
thousands of DUI cases in Georgia since passing the Bar in 1976,
and NONE in South Carolina, despite taking and passing the Bar
in that state in 1990. I merely joined the South Carolina organization
and helped fund its start-up out of a sense of loyalty to the
exceptional DUI lawyers in that state who invited me to assist
in forming the original Founding Members' seed group in June of
1992. The first SCACDL president was my co-author of "101
Ways to Avoid a Drunk Driving Conviction", Reese I. Joye
of North Charleston, SC, clearly the top DUI lawyer in that state.
Certainly, the Life Members or Founding Members of such state
organizations are typically among the best in that state.
d. Martindale.com - Martindale-Hubbell is the oldest
and most widely respected directory of attorneys in America. Their
rating of "AV" and/or their Pre-Eminent Lawyers designation
signifies excellent reputation and credentials. See the description
of these classifications at this link, or explanation of the "av",
"bv" and "cv" ratings at this link. These
designations of attorney quality alone do not mean proficiency
in handling DUI cases, but often identify members of the Bar in
your state who are deemed by their peers to be among the most
ethical and elite in your state. This link permits search of a
lawyer's page. I found my personal page at this link. Martindale-Hubbell
gives you a good bit of information, including the name of the
attorney's law school (see Number 14 below, as to why this matters).
e. Advanced Training. After finding that your
attorney fits one of these designations, search further within
the Internet profiles of the attorneys you are considering to
confirm that he or she is a specialist in "drunk driving
defense". The most highly trained D.U.I. lawyers have
attended several of the following specialized courses:
i. NHTSA Standardized Field Sobriety Test (Student
or “Practitioner” Course) – This is a 20 to
24 hour course that teaches the attorney how field tests are SUPPOSED
to be done, so that errors can be discovered and used to impeach
the officer’s testimony in court. Most DUI Task Force
officers have taken this course, at a minimum.
ii. NHTSA Standardized Field Sobriety Test
(Instructor Course) – This is the NEXT level of training
for serious DUI defense attorneys. This training consists
of 32 to 40 hours, and teaches the defense lawyer what the INSTRUCTOR
teaches the police office students within his/her classes.
This course has extensive written and video/DVD materials, and
requires each person attending to practice instructing the course.
iii. Breath Instrument Training Courses –
Only one breath test machine “factory” (BAC Datamaster)
permits criminal defense attorneys to attend their training course.
All other factories (including the manufacturer of Georgia’s
current breath machine, the Intoxilyzer 5000) fear allowing criminal
defense lawyers to attend the courses and block direct purchases
of breath instruments of their breath machines because they fear
that the flaws and limitations of the machines will be uncovered
and disclosed. The best breath course training is a 32 to
40 hour course that covers the pharmacokinetics of alcohol, basic
human physiology in the absorption and elimination of alcohol,
the electronic components of the machine, the scientific principles
upon which the machines function, shortcomings or limitations
in the specificity of the devices, analysis of computer downloads
and similar training. A good course requires extensive “hands
on” laboratory work where the students are required to set
up and connect all parts of the instrument (directly out of the
packing box), connect and fill the simulator and run calibration
tests, opening the cover of the machines to observe and identify
the various parts (i.e., chopper motor, light source, solenoids,
RFI detectors, etc.). This training meets of exceeds the
training that most state “supervisors” receive.
The National Safety Council set standards for breath instrument
training in the late 1980s, and these standards are still our
best standards today.
iv. DRE (or DRT) Overview Course – The latest
training for police officers (almost 100% of whom were originally
trained as DUI Task Force officers) is the Drug Recognition Technician
(DRT). The acronym “DRE” stands for “drug
recognition expert”, a title that officers eagerly boast
about. The officers are provided extensive training including
time at hospitals where they observe symptoms of patients who
are known to be under the influence of drugs. Lawyers are
not permitted to take the OFFICIAL course, but there are training
courses designed especially for DUI-DWI attorneys to attend whereby
DRE-trained, ex-police officers disclosed the PROPER and complete
training methodology and expose how officers misuse this training
by misstating the criteria and protocols required in conducting
a proper DRE evaluation. These courses are 20 to 32 hours
in length, and demonstrate the same “steps” that officers
must complete to be able to fully analyze a suspected DUI-drugs
suspect for possible impairment.
v. Blood and Urine Training – Only one
of these courses has been taught so far in the USA. This
course focuses on flaws in crime laboratory blood and urine testing
procedures and testing methodology. A 24 to 32 hour course
is required to identify these testing inadequacies and to explain
the scientific and electronic components of blood testing by gas
chromatography (for alcohol) or GC-MS methods (for drugs other
than alcohol). Urine testing is also covered extensively,
for such drug screening tests as immunoassay screens, marijuana
identification, etc. Attorneys who handle DUI-accident cases,
including vehicular homicide cases need this training to be able
to challenge the “junk science” and sloppy laboratory
work done at many state laboratories.
f. Seminar Speaker - The top attorneys in each state
are asked to speak for Georgia or national DUI seminars in their
state (and possibly in others). Being a regular invited speaker
for several consecutive years is generally a great indicator of
"quality" of the attorney. Be sure to distinguish between
"invited" speaking engagements versus self-promoting
seminars. Ask about this "indicator" from any D.U.I.
attorney that you are considering hiring.
One final note: Although it would be highly unlikely
that any attorney could be highly regarded or rated in ALL of
these types of professional organizations and services and not
be a top-notch DUI defender, it is possible. Starting with candidates
who have membership in as many of these legal organizations as
possible will most likely lead you to one of the best DUI attorneys
in America. On the other hand, it is possible that a skilled and
successful DUI-DWI attorney COULD be a member of NONE of these
groups or organizations, but I would be highly skeptical of such
claims.
2. Community and Courthouse Reputation – Turning
from where and how great DUI attorneys receive their training,
let’s talk about how to investigate and evaluate potential
Georgia attorneys. This section may provide the very best
measuring stick that anyone can use to judge a GA attorney's "skill
level". It best identifies whether the lawyer has established
a good name for himself or herself as a "winner" in
the legal community where your Georgia case is pending. If your
GA attorney has a sterling reputation within the legal community
where your case is pending, chances are it was earned through
hard work. Having a great COURTHOUSE reputation is more difficult
than having a stellar community reputation. Checking the attorney's
COURTHOUSE reputation is the most direct and accurate litmus test
of the GREAT drunk driving defense attorneys. Once you know the
courtroom you will be assigned to and the name of the judge handling
your case in Georgia, go to that judge's court BEFORE your court
date. Arrive early and sit and watch what occurs in court. After
the judge recesses for a break, try to speak to the court personnel
near the front of the courtroom. Ask a bailiff or the court reporter
or the calendar clerk or the deputy overseeing the courtroom WHICH
one of the lawyers that you are considering would he or she hire
if they were facing a DUI prosecution and HAD TO TAKE THEIR BEST
SHOT AT WINNING. Be sure to give them two or more names, because
they may be hesitant to "recommend" any one attorney
or law firm. Don’t be shocked if they advise you that they
do not really KNOW one or more of your list’s names.
Also, the prosecuting attorneys may or may not give
you an earnest opinion. Unless a prosecutor is a personal friend
of yours, with your best interest at heart, do not rely on prosecutor’s
recommendation. Many of them will try to steer you away from the
Hell-bent DUI trial attorneys, to ease their work load. Go with
a person from the clerk of court's office, a bailiff, a deputy
who is assigned to that Court or the court reporter. Another good
source for a name or two may be law enforcement officers who regularly
face these Georgia lawyers in court. Many---if directly
and privately asked---will tell you their honest opinion.
3. Disciplinary Actions - Has the attorney ever
been disciplined by the Board of Professional Responsibility of
the State bar of his/her practice location? This is an obvious
sign of problems. Also, some people falsely claim to be licensed
attorneys, so be careful. The state Bar is also the place to check
that the attorney is licensed and in good standing. Call your
state Bar to see if your lawyer is in "good standing".
Here is an American Bar Association map with links to all state
Bar associations, to make your job easier visit this link.
4. Fees and Fee Structure - How does the attorney
set his or her fees? Most Georgia drunken driving lawyers work
on a flat fee basis, though in some matters, hourly billing or
staged billing (triggered by the progress of the case through
court) may be done. Criminal matters cannot be handled on a "contingency"
basis, due to State Bar rules prohibiting this practice.
WARNING: Highly experienced attorneys often charge much higher
fees than younger, less experienced lawyers. Often, these high
fees are derived from market-driven "supply and demand"
pressures, but more likely are a natural function of the free
enterprise system. Additionally, a lawyer who fights each case
cannot take the volume of cases handled by a "pleader"
because trials and contested cases typically require 20 times
as much legal time (or more) as handling a guilty plea. Thus,
a GOOD trial lawyer typically will limit his or her caseload in
order to do an excellent job for each client by proceeding thoroughly
and meticulously to review every aspect of the case. If an attorney
prices himself or herself much higher than MOST other DUI lawyers
in the area, then do not hesitate to ask why. Don't be accusatory---just
ask what distinguishes this lawyer from the other candidates you
are considering who charge less. Conversely, a low fee quote usually
means that you will get exactly what you paid for.
One friend from Louisiana, Glynn Delatte, ends each
e-mail with this maxim: "Good lawyers aren't cheap, and cheap
lawyers aren't good." Seriously, the lawyer who quotes a
"low ball" fee may not have any idea how much work is
really involved in properly handling the case, or this attorney
just may be desperate for money. More likely, he or she is planning
to do very little work and later enter a guilty plea for your
case unless the State's case just falls apart and cannot be prosecuted.
Trial for such "pleader" attorneys is out of the question.
The lawyer who quotes a low fee may also be able to price the
services this way because the work is being pushed down to the
level of a legal assistant or very junior associate. The best
DUI lawyers typically charge more, and always do the critical
legal work (pre-trial motions and trials) themselves. Comparison
shopping may serve a valuable purpose, but if you are looking
for the attorney who can BEST handle your DUI successfully, the
"pool" of super lawyers is often very small in each
GA community. In smaller Georgia cities, you may need to go to
a suburban or larger metro area attorney to find a quality DUI
fighter. However, for many persons facing the extreme penalties
of a D.U.I.-D.W.I. conviction, price is secondary to results.
5. Client references - A strong reference from a
friend or colleague (especially an attorney) who has used the
potential DUI defender is often the best indicator of whether
a lawyer is worthy of hiring. Be sure, however, that the friend
or colleague has seen the attorney's skill in court versus merely
winning by default or pleading guilty for the friend. Often, attorneys
in your "market area'" who do NOT handle criminal cases
will know the names of several top DUI attorneys. Interview several
candidates and evaluate every aspect of HOW YOU AND YOUR CASE
ARE HANDLED, to see where you feel the most comfortable with your
chances of winning your case.
6. Focus of practice - Most truly great DUI attorneys
in Georgia either restrict their cases to drunk driving (and drugged
driving) or stay entirely within the field of criminal law. Some
of these attorneys work within law firms that handle other matters,
but the DUI specialist does nothing but drunk driving litigation.
If the attorney that you are considering spends less than 80%
of his or her legal time on criminal law, look further for an
attorney. Consider limiting your search for an attorney to a criminal
defense lawyer with a strong background or emphasis in DUI/DWI
defense. Watch out for firms that sign you up with "any available"
lawyers in the firm versus a SPECIFIC attorney in the firm who
has built a reputation for fighting these difficult cases. If
you pay premium dollars, the “name” you were sold
at your interview should be the lawyer handling your DUI trial
and (generally) the DUI pre-trial motions. Other routine appearances
such as arraignment, ALS hearings, calendar calls and similar
court dates can be handled by other attorneys who assist the DUI
specialist.
7. Drunk Driving Specialists - The lawyer who call
himself or herself "DUI attorney", yet has not tried
any cases (or only a couple) in the past 12 months are either
pleading guilty a great deal or not handling very many cases.
Ask questions about why no trials have been conducted. Even though
I limit the cases I accept to contested DUI cases, about 65% to
70% of all the drinking and driving cases I take are resolved
by a reduced plea (a non-DUI disposition such as reckless driving
or "lane violation") that are clear "victories"
in Georgia. This means no loss of driving privileges, no DUI on
my clients’ criminal records, and a very "favorable"
outcome for the person. Plus, if such a deal can be struck, the
client does not have to risk trial and (with some judges) possible
harsher punishment after trial. In other states (e.g., California)
getting a case reduced to reckless driving (versus the original
charge of DUI) is NOT a "victory" if it is a "wet
reckless" (defined as an alcohol-based original charge that
gets reduced to non-DUI reduction to “reckless driving”),
due to the penalties and license implications of such a plea.
Also ask the attorney about a percentage of ALL DUI cases that
he or she handled in which the clients ultimately ended up with
a favorable non-DUI disposition (on all the DUI counts, not just
the common law count or just the "per se DUI" charge).
8. Years in Practice - There is no substitute for
experience. This rule is true in both warfare and in criminal
trial practice. The longer one is involved in an active trial
practice, the better one's litigation instincts generally become.
But, the opposite can be true as well. Some lawyers who have been
practicing for years may become lazy about staying up to date
on the latest legal changes and trial strategies. Missing a key,
late-breaking appellate decision can allow a high breath or blood
test to come into evidence when it SHOULD have been excluded based
on the new legal attack. Some of the worst lawyers practicing
DUI law in this state are the ones who have been around the longest
and have quit following current case law or stopped learning the
newest and most advanced techniques for winning. So, look at the
candidates' RECENT advanced DUI law training and seminar attendance
record.
9. Lawyer-Paralegal ratio - A busy, experienced
DWI-DUI trial attorney will have 1 to 2 paralegals assisting him/her.
Trial preparation requires more time than processing guilty pleas.
A knowledgeable paralegal is worth his or her weight in gold.
Our paralegals are like the HUB of a wheel, and assign tasks and
responsibilities to many other support staffers, such as couriers,
process servers, investigators and law clerks. The paralegals
also coordinate the attorney's schedule with all courts. Our paralegals
also prepare and organize our files for motion hearings or trial.
An attorney who maintains a more modest ratio of one to two paralegals
per attorney may mean that the firm is not too overloaded with
work and it may mean that the attorney you thought you were hiring
actually knows what is happening on your case and has the time
to speak with you about your case. However, a truly skilled trial
lawyer relies on the trained paralegals to handle all routine
inquiries in order to keep him or her in court trying to negotiate
or win DUI cases.
10. Caseload - Is your lawyer taking on so much
work that there is no way cases can be properly handled? Too many
lawyers don't know when to draw the line and either say no to
taking on additional work or to make the decision to take on more
attorneys and staff. A trial attorney may limit his or her caseload
to between 40 and 100 cases per year, depending on these factors:
(1) What percentage of cases must go to trial. In
some states (e.g., Oregon and Kentucky), the prosecutor is legally
barred by statute from offering to reduce a DUII (DWI). In Georgia,
by carefully screening information about each potential client’s
case, I get about 65% to 70% of the cases that I elect to represent
resolved by non-DUI dispositions each year, without having to
complete trials in each case. Despite not having to go to trial,
the fee agreed upon and paid earlier in the case is definitely
fully earned by the reduction of charges, despite the case not
having to go through a two or three day trial.
(2) Can the case be resolved at a non-jury (bench)
trial or pre-trial motion hearing? This stage of a DUI case (pre-trial
motion hearings) can be heard weeks ahead of trial or immediately
prior to the trial being started. A successful motion hearing
can result in a total victory or it can persuade the prosecutor
to "cut a deal" for a non-DUI disposition. Lawyers who
are successful at winning bench trials and pre-trial motions can
handle a larger number of cases because DUI jury trials in GA
require 3 to 6 times the hours (or more) at pre-trial motions
or a bench (non-jury) trial to resolve.
11. Use of Technology - Technology in DUI-DWI law
has revolutionized the practice of impaired driving law probably
as much as any other area in the legal profession. Does your attorney
not only USE e-mail, but encourage its utilization by you? Does
your lawyer have quality, comprehensive information on the Internet
in one or more Web sites? Does the attorney have the latest
legal research and case management software? Does the attorney
provide electronic newsletters and e-mail alerts to inform clients
of breaking news about DUI and criminal law matters? Does the
firm have an extranet (or a quick response e-mail plan) that allows
you to log in to a private and secure web site to see what is
happening on your case? Does the lawyer participate in Georgia
or national list servers or blogs? Lawyers who master technology
deliver legal services with better quality and reliability.
Often, these firms can leverage technology to deliver legal services
less expensively. Additionally, miscues such as an attorney failing
to properly calendar a court date for your case will typically
be minimized by utilizing case management software.
12. Communication - The number one complaint against
lawyers in this country is not poor work quality. It is failing
to communicate with their clients. You are paying a lot of money
to hire a lawyer and it is your right to expect to be kept informed
of developments and have your calls and e-mails returned in a
timely manner. Please note that this does NOT mean that the client
and our firm communicate daily. Busy trial attorneys cannot do
that. There is such a thing as chronic anxiety that triggers excessive
inquiries on the part of a few clients. Calling your lawyer every
day to find out what is happening on your case is not "communication."
It is a sign of extreme anxiety that may dictate a mental health
evaluation and treatment for the stress that these difficult cases
may cause.
13. Board Certified - As mentioned in Paragraph
1, the National College for DUI Defense (NCDD) now offers a national
certification for DUI specialists. Of course, your attorney's
state may or may not allow lawyers within that state to broadcast
or "advertise" such certification. A few states certify
lawyers in the area of criminal law (as opposed to "DUI defense").
If your lawyer practices in a state that does permit certification,
ask whether he or she has obtained this credential. It may be
a desirable designation in some states (i.e., in Texas, most criminal
attorneys who specialize do NOT seek this Texas bar credentialing)
due to the manner that it restricts the practitioner or exposes
him/her to additional liability. Board certification is no guarantee
of quality, but it can certainly be an indicator of expertise,
especially if obtained from NCDD.
14. Educational Background - While many fine lawyers
have come out of mediocre or unaccredited law schools and many
lousy lawyers come out of the Ivy League law schools, where a
lawyer went to law school can still be an indicator of a person's
ability to regularly achieve trial success. Most of America's
top law firms acknowledge that the best law schools are "ABA-approved."
This means that a branch of the American Bar Association has investigated
the law school thoroughly for quality on dozens of "measuring
sticks". For a complete list, please go to the ABA web site
to look up your attorney's law school at this link.
15. Publications - Lawyers who write frequently
about their area of law practice tend to keep themselves better
informed about their area of specialty. The ability to get a scholarly
article published in legal magazines or DUI trade journals is
a good barometer of the lawyer's expertise. Being on the
Editorial Board of a publication dedicated to defense of drinking
drivers is another excellent indicator of well-recognized expertise.
When an attorney writes a top-selling "book" on DUI
law in Georgia, this is generally a superb indicator of an advanced
level of knowledge and expertise.
16. Promotional Materials - Pay attention to a law
firm's “client information package”, marketing, Internet
and promotional materials. Are they professional and polished
or do they give the appearance of being "fly-by-night"?
How the law firm and its staff present itself to its clients and
potential clients may be an indicator of how the firm will present
itself - and, consequently, you - in court.
17. Conflicts of Interest - Some DUI defense lawyers
may also act as part-time prosecutors in one or more inferior
(small courts of limited jurisdiction). Some may even act as a
part-time judge in an inferior court. An attorney cannot act as
a defense attorney in the same court, however. These lawyers typically
will screen any potential "conflicts" and never see
any potential clients with cases pending in their courts. Usually,
such conflicts are not a problem. But be careful to pay attention
to this fact if the lawyer does not immediately stop all discussions
about ANY ASPECT of a case pending in his or her "court."
18. Sub-specialization within the DUI Field - A
number of "drunk driving defense lawyers" focus on particular
types of matters within the DUI arena. For example, some lawyers
only handle administrative license suspension or administrative
license revocation matters. They never go to DUI criminal trials
or pre-trial motions in criminal cases. Other criminal attorneys
may only handle appeals of criminal law cases, including appeals
of DUI cases.
19. Personality Compatibility - Your interaction
with your Georgia DUI attorney in evaluating his or her approach
to handling your case (goal compatibility) with your objectives
should be more than just an analysis of the attorney's experience
and competency. At the end of the day, a lawyer's "bedside
manner" can mean a lot to how the overall relationship goes.
Some clients are especially "on edge" and need more
nurturing, due to the stress that a DUI puts them under. Others
merely want the attorney they hire to be a gladiator and go slay
the dragon for them, and need no nurturing at all. Find a Georgia
lawyer who really cares about winning, and be realistic about
your level of need in being "nurtured" (or not being
nurtured) by the attorney. Since 90% or more of your communications
will be with the attorney's staff, their supportiveness and attitude
is also very important. Difficult or uncaring staff members are
not being "team players" for your cause. However, you
must not constantly call the staff to ask for an update, when
the progress of the case may be slow and somewhat plodding.
20. Promising too much - There are actually DUI
lawyers in Georgia who swear they have never lost a case even
after a lengthy trial career. Be skeptical about lawyers who promise
success. An old wag among experienced DUI trial lawyers is "Show
me a DUI lawyer who has never lost a DUI case, and I'll show you
a lawyer who has never gone to trial on many if any DUI cases."
A lawyer who honestly presents the real risks and
perils of trial without trying to convince you to accept an ill-advised
plea of guilty to DUI is what you seek. However, after reviewing
over 20,000 DUI files, I can truthfully say that almost EVERY
DUI case deserves basic investigation before reaching an agreement
to plead guilty. Likewise, be very wary of attorneys who
claim to have special influence or "standing" with the
judge or prosecutor in your case. An attorney who spends more
time "name-dropping" impressive political or judicial
names than explaining the favorable aspects and merits of your
case should be avoided like the plague! Also beware of lawyers
who speak too negatively about his or her competitors. If the
lawyer is worthy, he or she can stand on his or her own track
record and reputation rather than tearing down the record of knowledgeable,
competent competitors. When you have your quest for an attorney
narrowed down to 2 or 3 potential attorneys who all seem to have
the right credentials, go back to Number 2 above, and go to the
COURTHOUSE for "the final answer".
21. Engagement Letters - Read the fine print in
your engagement letters or "fee agreements." Some lawyers
load agreements down with so much "legalese" and one-sided
provisions that such agreements should give you concern. Consider
using a lawyer who provides an agreement that is written in plain
English that appears to be even-handed. Also make certain that
you know what costs (beyond the fees) are your costs to pay and
whether any appeals or potential re-trials (after a mistrial or
"hung" jury) require additional fees.
22. Language Skills - Some clients who are not native
English speakers may feel more comfortable working with a lawyer
fluent in their language. A skilled DUI trial attorney who does
not speak your language should have staff members available to
translate or telephone-based translation services. In trial, courts
must provide you with translation services at every court proceeding.
23. Ethics - RUN as fast as you can from an attorney
that tell you it is okay to lie or otherwise act dishonestly in
your case. Aside from the obvious questions of ethics, professionalism
and morality, you are risking jail time for any complicity in
such shenanigans. About 10 years ago, one Atlanta criminal defense
attorney who was paying off people to dispose of pending cases
was disbarred and spent 40 months in federal prison for violating
federal laws that strictly prohibit such acts and CONSPIRACY to
commit such crimes. Less than 6 years ago, another attorney, this
time a prosecutor in a suburb southwest of Atlanta, lost his license
to practice law and received an 8 year sentence for accepting
bribes to “fix” cases. The defense attorney
engaging in such illegal acts is risking disbarment, jail time
and potential civil litigation by suggesting this. RUN AWAY from
such crooks! You could be named as a co-conspirator in the crime.
It is not worth looking over your shoulder for the next decade
or so for a GBI or FBI agent coming to get you, much less the
REAL potential for dramatically more serious legal problems.
24. Appellate History - Has your attorney pursued
any DUI-related appeals? If so, get the names and legal citation
of at least 5 significant appeals he or she has handled. Ask for
a total number of appeals he or she has handled. DUI trial attorneys
will often handle an average of 1 or 2 appeals per year of practice.
So, a DUI TRIAL lawyer who has been in practice 20 years should
have 20 to 40 appeals. Be aware that some TRIAL lawyers "farm
out" all appeals to specialists, so be sure to ask for a
list of cases of this type that were appealed by another appellate
law specialist.
What do I do if I just cannot afford the TOP DUI
lawyer in my area?
Many people will not be able to afford the top DUI/DWI
lawyer in their area due to cost. If this is your dilemma, options
exist that will allow you to utilize the services of a skilled
drunk driving attorney. Many lawyers who are excellent at fighting
these difficult cases are partners or associates in the firm headed
up by the top attorney in your market. Many of these attorneys
have track records that are similar to the top Georgia DUI lawyer's
record, because these attorneys regularly obtain advanced-level
training from the top attorney, share information about trial
strategy, review and research defenses to breath test admissibility
and field evaluations, expert witnesses, judges' tendencies, prosecutors'
weaknesses and police officers' lack of training or other problems.
If you can’t afford the top attorney’s fee in the
firm, why not hire a partner or associate for a fraction of the
fee set by the TOP DUI attorney?
Keep in mind that if money for a lawyer is impossible
to obtain, you may need to be screened by the public defender
or similar organization handling indigent cases, if your financial
resources are low. T qualify for such an “appointed”
attorney, you will be screened extensively by your judge or his/her
court staff to determine whether you truly are unable to pay a
fee.
Many lawyers may offer to "unbundle" their
legal services and may offer "a la carte" legal work.
In DUI practice, the first fee set may be for handling the ALS
(ALR) administrative license suspension-revocation hearing. This
is NOT a criminal matter, but is a related "civil" proceeding
that determines whether you can continue to drive, operate on
a restricted license, or not drive at all. This means that instead
of the attorney handling a case from beginning to end, some attorneys
will work on specific aspects of the case or simply provide you
with the lawyer's expertise or oversight on an “item-by-item”
basis. This type of “piecemeal” handling of
specific matters could be disastrous if (due to delay) evidence
is lost or destroyed by your attorney not promptly seeking copies
of internal videotapes at the police station, audio recordings
of a “911” call, or similar evidence that tends to
be recycled over or disposed of after a certain time period. By
having too many attorneys involved with your case, a chance of
you or your “attorneys” missing a court date (which
could result in a bond forfeiture being declared by the judge),
can be followed by your arrest for a “bench warrant”
for non-appearance.
The opposite of this practice of "unbundling"
is the super lawyer who limits the number of cases he/she takes.
In doing so, these attorneys may offer a flat, non-negotiable
fee. If a client hires a TOP DUI attorney on this basis, relying
upon a stellar "track record" at either winning DUI
cases or getting charges reduced, the fee is a "results-driven"
transaction where the attorney is committing to dedicating one
of his or her time "slots" and his/her expertise in
exchange for the agreed fee --- paid in full. If you hire such
a specialist, be sure that you would be comfortable expending
the fee quoted, or look for a less expensive alternative.
What are you to do if your lawyer mismanages your
case?
Unfortunately, the question of what to do when you
have hired an ineffective DUI lawyer is more than just theoretical
for many. The answer about how to proceed largely depends on the
facts of your case. First, determine whether the problem is really
the lawyer's fault. In many cases, people complain that their
lawyers are ineffective when, in fact, the problems are beyond
the lawyer's control. One common example is where the police videotape
is so damning that the attorney has little chance of success at
trial. Some cases are lost by what the client says or does on
video.
If your lawyer really has botched the case (or some
aspect of the case) but you think the mistake is honest and does
not reflect deeper problems relating to competency, it may be
easier to work with the lawyer in resolving the matter than in
just switching to a new law firm. If you question the competency
of your DUI lawyer, you may want to get a second opinion from
another attorney. Request this opinion from an attorney who is
NOT a candidate to become your attorney and who has no business
or personal CONNECTION to the existing lawyer.
Don't be shocked if a desired "substitute"
attorney will not consider taking your case. Busy specialists,
especially the TOP attorneys, don't want to inherit a "mess"
created by another attorney on your case. Also, people who switch
lawyers are sometimes "problem clients." Many people
simply have a negative mindset and will never be satisfied with
their lawyers. While many people have legitimate reasons to change
lawyers, you really want to avoid appearing to be fickle or portray
a "troublemaker" image, so make sure you choose carefully
the first time.
If your lawyer grossly mismanages your case, you
have two remedies. You can file a complaint with the board of
professional responsibility for the Georgia Bar at this link.
Plus, for certain misconduct, you may also have the option of
suing the attorney for legal malpractice. These remedies may be
of little use if you have lost your case and have a DUI conviction
on your record.
At the end of the day, making yourself an educated
consumer of legal services will improve your chance for your Georgia
DUI case to be managed successfully. That means learning as much
as you can about Georgia’s drunk driving laws so that you
can work with your GA attorney to seek to achieve the best solution
possible for your DUI case. It also will help you make sure that
you are hiring a Georgia lawyer that really is a true specialist
in this complex area of law.
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William C. Head, Senior Partner
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