Florida Field Sobriety Tests

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Florida Field Sobriety Tests During a DUI investigation, you may be asked to perform a series of field sobriety exercises. This guide will help you know what to expect and be prepared.

Transcript of Florida Field Sobriety Tests

Florida Field Sobriety Tests

During a DUI investigation, you may be asked to perform a series of field sobriety exercises. This guide will help you know what to expect and be prepared.

Table of Contents

Avoid a DUI conviction 3 ........................................................

The Exercises 5 .........................................................................

Walk and Turn 7 ........................................................................

Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus 9 ..................................................

One-leg Stand 11 ......................................................................

Rhomberg Balance 13 ..............................................................

Finger-to-Nose 15.....................................................................

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Avoid a DUI conviction A DUI conviction carries a stigma that can have lasting impacts on your personal & professional lives.

There are some things you can at

least anticipate and prepare for

should you find yourself in the

unfortunate position of being

investigated for DUI. During

almost every stop that involves a

DUI investigation, the suspect will

be asked to perform a series of

field sobriety tests.

The simple truth is that once you get behind the wheel of a car and drive, or are in actual physical control of a car, you have opened yourself up to the potential of being investigated for DUI. Don’t make the mistake of thinking that it can’t happen to you.

Note: Florida courts have rejected police officers and prosecutors characterizing

these activities as “tests,” and prefer them to be called “exercises.” However, when

you consider that one’s ability to perform to standards on them is a critical factor in

determining whether or not the person will be arrested, they inherently feel as

though they are pass/fail, and, to me at least, that’s a test.

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Should I take the Field Sobriety Tests?

Generally, yes, you should take the field sobriety tests if the police request it. Some

attorneys will advise otherwise, but here is my reasoning based on my extensive

experience in defending DUI cases. If your case goes all the way to a jury trial, the

results of the tests will almost always look better to a jury than a refusal to perform

the tests.

I know how to highlight the good in your test performance and downplay anything

questionable. It’s not hard to frame a police officer’s expectations, or the exercises

themselves, as unreasonable. That puts a reasonable doubt into jurors’ minds.

If you are then arrested after performing the sobriety tests, we can use that in your

defense as well. That’s because if you follow my other advice, you will then refuse any

breath, blood, or urine test requested. This, of course, could look suspicious to a jury.

But if you submitted to the FSEs, I can use that to reason with jurors that you had

jumped through hoops and cooperated with the officer, only to be arrested. It’s no

wonder you then refused a breath test.

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START

The Exercises Let’s take a look at the exercises and how to properly perform them. Even a sober person can be tripped up, so knowing what to expect can go a long way to keeping you out of trouble.

DUI police officers trained in investigating DUIs learn how to administer five field

sobriety tests: (1) Walk-and-Turn; (2) HGN; (3) One-leg Stand; (4) Rhomberg Balance;

and (5) Finger-to-Nose. These exercises, which were created and standardized by the

National Highway Traffic Safety Association (NHTSA), call for one to divide attention,

multi-task, use memory recall skills, and perform abnormal physical tasks. These tests

are crucial to any DUI investigation and prosecution. Police officers spend dozens of

hours being trained on how to administer them, during which they get ample

opportunity to practice performing them. They are even provided with a single-page

cheat sheet that has diagrams and fields of information to remind them what to look

for when you’re performing.

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The Police Will Ask Questions Quickly

Do you think police officers are so fair and objective that they will show you that

sheet of paper (the questions on the exam, if you will) so that you can see what

they’re really looking for you to do? Nope. Do you think they will give you a few

moments to practice performing these tasks that, in all likelihood, you’ve never seen

or done before to ensure that when the test really counts you have a fair shot at

passing? Nope. All you will get is a series of rapid-fire instructions and the officer’s

demonstration as to what he or she is looking for. So use the information below to

increase your level of awareness now.

Before you do anything, listen and wait to begin! This applies to all five field sobriety tests equally. Make sure that you do not start performing the test until you are specifically instructed to do so. The police officer will likely be rattling off instructions while simultaneously demonstrating how they expect to see it done.

Your ability to follow directions is a key part of the test!

It’s human nature to want to immediately mimic what you see. But start too soon, and

that officer will count it against you, and later remind the jury that you “couldn’t

follow a simple instruction” to wait until told to begin, which is a sign of impairment.

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Walk and Turn You will first be asked to stand in the starting position during the instructional stage.

This requires you to place one foot in front of the other, touching heel-to-toe, with

your hands resting down by your sides.

You will be expected to maintain the starting position, without losing your balance or stepping out of that position, the entire time the officer is giving you instructions and demonstrating.

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Move your front foot back to a natural standing position — even just to be

comfortable while watching the officer demonstrate — and it will count against you,

characterized as an inability to maintain balance or listen to instructions.

Next, you will be asked to walk on a straight line, placing one foot in front of the

other, always touching heel-to-toe, for 9 steps out. Don’t raise your arms for balance;

don’t step off the line; don’t create more than a 6” gap between heel-to-toe or you will

be docked. After your 9th step, you will be expected to turn in a very specific manner.

They want you to take a series of small pivot steps while keeping one foot down as the

plant/pivot point. Even if you are so graceful as to do a super spin in one fell swoop

and look like a gymnast, it will only count against you.

The walk and turn is the most commonly administered DUI field sobriety exercise.

Then, walk 9 steps back to where you started from—just as you did before (touching

heel-to-toe, straight line, with hands down by your side). If you step off the line at any

point, immediately correct yourself and keep going. If you miss heel-to-toe, correct

yourself and keep going. Sometimes it’s natural to want to stop the test when you feel

like you messed up and restart. Most DUI cops will let you restart, but when you do,

they later remind the jury that you had to try and perform the test 2 or 3 times.

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Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus The HGN test is the one you commonly see with officers asking people to follow an object with their eyes.

Supposedly, you cannot control whether your eye will exhibit nystagmus, so don’t stress over this too much. It’s supposed to be involuntary.

What the officer is looking for are 3 clues that might be present in each eye: (i)

whether your eye has nystagmus (a jerking movement); (ii) when the nystagmus first

occurs; and (iii) whether you have distinct nystagmus at “maximum deviation.”

Officers describe that jerking as a windshield wiper across a dry or dirty windshield

versus a clean, wet windshield where they glide smoothly.

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Prior to performing HGN, the officer is supposed to ask you a series of questions.

Why? They think that if they can ensure you don’t have corrective lenses; head

trauma; or are taking any specific medications, if nystagmus is present, it correlates to

impairment by alcohol. They may say during trial that seeing HGN prior to 45 degrees

when making side-to-side passes magically correlates to a 0.08 or higher. (I know, 45

degrees? How could they possibly know? They don’t use a protractor. They are

trained to use other areas of the body (i.e. shoulder) as indicators, but most don’t even

know that much).

The best DUI lawyers in Miami know how to effectively challenge HGN and, quite often, keep it excluded from trial. That’s because in Florida, this is the only field sobriety test that courts say requires “expert testimony” during trial.

This aspect of the law allows aggressive DUI lawyers to argue, before trial, to prevent

the officer from being treated as an expert for that purpose, thereby preventing the

jury from hearing about it. Even if a judge lets it in, an effective cross examination

can expose its flaws.

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03

One-leg Stand Like the walk-and-turn, this test has an instructional and performance phase. Remember, don’t start before instructed!

During the instructional stage, you will be told to stand on one leg, whichever you prefer, while raising the other leg in the air at least 6” off the ground; also, flex your foot, look down at that foot’s toes, and keep your hands at your side.

Do this, sometimes while having to count out loud, for around 30 seconds or until the

officer tells you to stop.

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If you raise your hands more than 6” from your side (which, how on earth are cops

measuring this anyway? So keep them pressed against your side in an abundance of

caution) or put your foot down for balance, even if for a moment, just correct yourself

and keep going. If you start hopping on your plant foot for balance, that, too, will

count against you.

So remain calm and relaxed. Try not to raise your leg so high that it creates a higher

risk for losing your balance. The officer is looking for all of these things. If you have a

problem with a leg, foot, knee, ankle, back, or any other affliction that you think

impacts your ability to perform, let the officer know before you begin.

If you have a medical condition that prevents you from preforming the tests, speak up. The officer should note that on the test report.

Officers will try to hang their hat at trial on the excuse of, “Well, I said he or she could

use whichever foot they prefer, and they still couldn’t do it right.” What if you have a

medical condition that prevents you from doing as instructed? Let them know. Even if

you want to try to perform the test regardless of a medical condition, the DUI officer

should note that on the test report.

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04

Rhomberg Balance This is another test for balance and ability to recall specific instructions that also requires multi-tasking.

During the instructional phase, you will be asked to stand with your feet together and

place your hands down by your side. When told to begin, tilt your head back, close

your eyes, and “estimate” the passage of 30 seconds (in your head!). When you think

time is up, bring your head back forward, open your eyes, and say stop.

It always helps to know what police are looking for before the test. The better your performance, the better chance of beating your case.

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The officer will again be looking for swaying, hopping, lost balance, but also things

like forgetting to keep your eyes closed, counting out loud instead of in your head, or

counting for way too long.

Alcohol usually has the effect of delaying people’s responses. The officer will be

watching his or her digital stop watch. If you allowed 60-90 seconds to pass by before

actually stopping, they will try to use that against you. Although they don’t tell you

how to count (meaning, “1-2-3…” vs. “1 Mississippi-2 Mississippi- 3…”), I recommend

having a method and sticking to it.

This test is not always administered. So don’t worry if it’s not. But when it is, I know how to destroy it on cross examination at trial.

Still, it always helps if you know what they’re looking for now, before the test is for

real. The better your performance, the better chance of beating your case.The walk

and turn is the most commonly administered DUI field sobriety exercise.

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Finger-to-Nose The last test usually administered is the finger-to-nose.

You will be asked to close your eyes, with your hands out by your side, and, when

prompted by a verbal order (e.g. “Left” or “Right”), use the appropriate hand’s index

finger to touch the tip of your nose before bringing it back down to your side.

The officer will tell you which arm to use during the exercise. There is no pattern, so listen carefully to the instruction before bringing the tip of your finger to your nose. An officer may try to trip you up by alternating arms unevenly.

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Here are a few key things to remember:

First, keep your eyes closed the entire time.

Second, you need to touch the “tip” of your index finger to the “tip” of your nose. If

you do what people normally do, which is rest the pad of your index finger flush on

the tip of your nose, you didn’t “do as instructed” and they will dock you for it. How

silly is that? If you touch anywhere on your nose besides the tip of it, they will note

that too.

Third, don’t try to guess which hand the officer wants you to use. They will call it out

for you. So calm down and listen. They may not always alternate evenly. Sometimes

they get tricky and will do Left-Right-Left-Left to trip you up. Lastly, always remember

to remove your finger after touching your nose and put it back down by your side.

305-938-9939 www.redavidlaw.com

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