Most operating while intoxicated (OWI) cases don’t involve accidents or serious injuries. A police officer on patrol notices “bad driving” (weaving, swerving, etc.), pulls the car over, notices “signs of intoxication” from the driver (smell of alcohol, bloodshot eyes, etc.), and the driver is eventually arrested. A run-of-the-mill OWI is a misdemeanor, and most judges will not order jail time.
Sometimes, though, an OWI can lead to tragedy—the death of another person. Most often this happens when a client causes an accident that kills another driver or one of the client’s passengers. Suddenly, a misdemeanor has turned into a felony, and the likely consequences have moved behind jail time to a prison sentence.
There are five elements to OWI causing death, all of which the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt:
When will the defendant’s operation of the vehicle be the cause of the victim’s death? But for the defendant’s operation of the vehicle, the death would not have occurred. Additionally, the death must have been a direct and natural result of operating the vehicle.
A man and his friend go out to a bar for a few drinks one winter night. On the way back, the man is speeding down the road, loses traction on a patch of ice, and crashes into a tree. The friend is killed instantly. The driver is seriously injured and taken to a hospital. Police obtain a search warrant to draw his blood. The result shows a bodily alcohol content of 0.12.
A woman is driving in a busy metropolitan area and hits a pedestrian in a crosswalk. The pedestrian—scraped and bruised but apparently all right—is taken to a hospital as a precaution. Police officers who arrive at the scene notice that the driver is slurring her speech and unsteady on her feet. She agrees to submit to a breath test, which shows a bodily alcohol level of 0.15. A day later, the pedestrian dies in the hospital.
Other similar or related offenses include:
Two common defenses in OWI causing death cases are (1) intervening cause of death, and (2) search and seizure violations.
Take the man whose friend died on the way home from the bar. Assume that there are no witnesses to the accident. The prosecution’s case will hinge on the blood test result. Suppose that in the application for a search warrant, the police officer had merely written that the driver had been seen speeding before the accident. This implicates the probable-cause requirement for issuance of a warrant under the Fourth Amendment. If the allegations in a warrant application don’t provide reason to believe that the person committed the alleged crime, the warrant is invalid. Here, that the driver had been seen speeding before the accident, standing alone, will not supply probable cause to believe that the man was operating while intoxicated, so the blood test result will be inadmissible, potentially sinking the prosecution’s case.
Now consider the woman who hit the pedestrian. There’s no question that the accident sent the pedestrian to the hospital, where she later died. But let’s add some details. Suppose she was operated on by a surgeon who, confusing her with another patient, attempted open heart surgery on her, during which she died. Under the law, a doctor’s gross negligence is considered an “intervening cause” that can supersede the car accident as the cause of the pedestrian’s death. Here, then, the driver very likely would not be liable for causing the pedestrian’s death.
OWI causing death is a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000. If the driver’s bodily alcohol content was 0.17 or above, the offense is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Likewise, if the victim was a police officer, firefighter, or other emergency response personnel, the offense is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
If you’re under investigation for or have been charged with OWI causing death, you need to hire a skilled criminal defense attorney as soon as possible. Prosecutors pursue OWI causing death charges aggressively, often refusing to offer a plea bargain. In other words, you need an attorney who’s ready to fight the case at trial.
For more information about OWI causing death and to talk about your case, contact Grabel & Associates at (800) 342-7896.