DUI Miranda Rights in Illinois
Reader’s Question:
The Miranda warnings are very popular statements of the police during an arrest and I don’t know what happens if they forget to say it during a DUI arrest. What if the officer fails to read me my rights if in case I get arrested for DUI here in Champaign, Illinois?
Laquita
Champaign, IL
There is often a common misconception about the failure of a police officer to read a person his/her Miranda rights (i.e., “You have the right to remain silent, you have a right to an attorney”) during a DUI arrest. Unfortunately, if you get arrested for DUI in Champaign, Illinois and the police officer failed to read you your Miranda rights, the DUI case will not be dismissed. These Miranda warnings would only affect the admissibility of statements made by a DUI suspect after he/she is arrested.
For example, if an individual is stopped over because his tail lights are not working and he tells the police officer, “I’m drunk as a skunk and I never should have been driving,” this could be used against the person because the person is not arrested or in custody. But if the individual is in handcuffs and, answering the police officer’s questions says, “I was drunk as a skunk and never should have been driving,” the police could not use this statement unless they have read the person his/her Miranda rights.
Illinois DUI Traffic Stop – Why Was I Stopped?
Reader’s Question:
When I was arrested for DUI here in Evanston, Illinois, I really didn’t understand why the officer asked me to pull over. I don’t remember that I committed any traffic violation. What are the possible reasons why an officer could ask a driver to pull over because of a DUI suspicion?
Bonnie
Evanston, IL
On your DUI arrest in Evanston,, the police officer should have had a ‘reasonable suspicion’ to pull you over. It may constitute a ‘reasonable suspicion’ if the police officer observed that your vehicle was swerving over lanes. Similarly, if you were driving with a broken headlight, broken taillight, driving too fast or even with your high-beams on (in traffic), that could also be sufficient ‘reasonable suspicion’ to pull you over. But if after an investigation of your DUI case that it is discovered that your broken taillight was nothing more than a crack in the red plastic, or if you were driving with your high-beams on and a significant distance from other vehicles, the DUI stop would be considered illegal and an appropriate motion to suppress and could result in an order excluding all evidence after the illegal stop.
The evidence that can be excluded would be the police officer’s observations, breath test results, field sobriety tests and anything else that the state attorney might rely on to obtain a conviction. It has also been found that minor swerving within lanes could be an insufficient reason for an officer to stop your vehicle. Similarly, since newer vehicles are equipped with three or more tail lights, a DUI stop for a malfunctioning tail light is improper if two of the three tail lights on your vehicle were operating properly
