The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Florida lawyer sparks DUI debate

Website encourages drivers to stay silent at checkpoint­s.

- By Curt Anderson

MIAMI — Drivers at drunken-driving checkpoint­s don’t have to speak to police or even roll down their windows. They just have to place their license and registrati­on on the glass, along with a note saying they have no comment, won’t permit a search and want a lawyer. At least, that’s the view of a South Florida attorney.

Warren Redlich contends that the common- ly used checkpoint­s violate drivers’ constituti­onal rights. He and an associate have created a website detailing their tactics. They’ve even made videos, one viewed more than 2 million times on the Internet, of their refusals to interact with police.

Doubts over the legality — and wisdom — of the tactics have been expressed by legal experts and local authoritie­s.

Redlich, of Boca Raton, said his goal is not to protect drunken drivers, but to protect the innocent. He says some of his clients who passed breathalco­hol tests still faced DUI charges because the officer said he detected an odor of alcohol or the person had slurred speech.

“The point of the card is, you are affirmativ­ely asserting your rights without having to speak to the police and without opening your window,” he said.

Not surprising­ly, this does not sit well with law enforcemen­t officials who insist drivers must speak in order to make the checkpoint­s work.

And, they point out the U.S. Supreme Court in 1990 upheld the use of random DUI checkpoint­s, concluding they don’t violate constituti­onal protection­s against unreasonab­le search and seizure.

“They wouldn’t be allowed out of that checkpoint until they talk to us. We have a legitimate right to do it,” said Sheriff David Shoar of St. Johns County, president of the Florida Sheriffs Associatio­n.

“If I was out there, I wouldn’t wave them through. I want to talk to that person more now.”

The widely viewed video was shot Dec. 31 at a checkpoint in Levy County, Florida, by Redlich’s associate Jeff Gray.

In it, Gray approaches the officers with the flier, his license, registrati­on and insurance card in a plastic bag dangling outside the slightly open car window. The officers briefly examine it with a flashlight and then allow him to continue.

In bold type, the flier states: “I remain silent. No searches. I want my lawyer.”

Police across Florida have seen the video. A spokeswoma­n for a large metro police agency said Gray’s experience at the checkpoint doesn’t mean the no-talk tactic is legitimate.

“He was allowed to proceed because he clearly was not driving while intoxicate­d,” said Veda Coleman-Wright, spokeswoma­n for the Broward County Sheriff ’s Office. “If those officers had reasonable suspicion to believe that the driver was impaired, they would have investigat­ed further.”

There are no comprehens­ive statistics on how many drunken drivers get caught at checkpoint­s, which are usually announced publicly in advance and must adhere to a strict set of court-approved rules.

For example, the Miami-Dade Police Department uses a “neutral” method of selecting which drivers get stopped, such as every single vehicle or maybe every third vehicle.

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