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I've never been pulled over for anything, but what are peoples' thoughts on refusing a FST, even if you're completely sober? I've read a bit about the varying intent and reliability of FSTs and portable breathalyzers and I'm inclined to tell an officer 'no thanks' followed by 'am I free to go?' I generally don't drink and drive at all and rarely give cops a reason to pull me over, so if I ever got pulled over at night, I can see myself getting in this scenario. I generally don't trust cops at all, not after the various stories and footage I've seen. Sure, in general, they serve the community and I appreciate that but many departments seem to put their own safety and institutional precepts above civil liberties, so I don't expect them to look out for my interests at all.
You give automatic consent to a breathalyzer when you drive, and in most states refusal to give one is an automatic DUI or something similar. Most of the time a FST is just a justification for a breathalyzer, refusing one won't do much for you, in my non-lawyer opinion.I've never been pulled over for anything, but what are peoples' thoughts on refusing a FST, even if you're completely sober? I've read a bit about the varying intent and reliability of FSTs and portable breathalyzers and I'm inclined to tell an officer 'no thanks' followed by 'am I free to go?' I generally don't drink and drive at all and rarely give cops a reason to pull me over, so if I ever got pulled over at night, I can see myself getting in this scenario. I generally don't trust cops at all, not after the various stories and footage I've seen. Sure, in general, they serve the community and I appreciate that but many departments seem to put their own safety and institutional precepts above civil liberties, so I don't expect them to look out for my interests at all.
Good grief. He had THAT much trouble finding an open spot in that lot away from everyone else?This is not true in all cases and in all locations. As with everything, it depends on the circumstances. I had a Sailor recently who actually made it through the gate and back to the barracks, only to be reported (and arrested) because he was having significant issues trying to park at the on-base Subway. Everything was handled by the Navy, no civilian law enforcement involvement. But, just my .02c![]()
Yeah, this kid was a train wreck from A to Z and someone we spent a LOT of time trying to fix. This incident found his BAC almost 4 times the legal limit. The funny part was he was observed and ultimately turned in by the SAPR barracks watch !!!! Don't askGood grief. He had THAT much trouble finding an open spot in that lot away from everyone else?![]()
Don't know if it is the case in the other services, but in the Coast Guard, new policy says that if you refuse to blow you will be processed for discharge. Something to think about.Refusal of an FST probably doesn't matter, but they are then gonna ask you to blow. You refuse the breathalyzer and that's an automatic license suspension.
Sounds like a huge asshole that doesn't need saving. In my opinion and not really relevant to the thread.getting lit for the first time while underage, and then beating the crap out of their significant other when they try to take the keys.
Trust me when I say there's more to the story, but I'm being deliberately vague on a public forum for the sake of anonymity. I'm certainly not minimizing how bad DV is, but this particular case was the exception that proves the rule. What actually happened needed to be punished, but not to the degree that would have happened in civ court. What ended up happening IMO was well-tailored to the offense. PM me if you want; it was a bit of a unique situation. Yes, people who are OK with using violence in relationships to try to control their partner obviously need to be crushed. This wasn't that. What came down at Mast and afterward was a classic case of using punishment to successfully rehabilitate a person instead of just stomping on them with both feet and throwing them out of the Navy. That's what makes me proud.Sounds like a huge asshole that doesn't need saving. In my opinion and not really relevant to the thread.
Citation RequiredWhen you sign for a drivers license you pledge to not consume any alcohol and drive a motor vehicle.
What ever you did illegal to be pulled over in the first place.Citation Required
Can't find anything for what you sign for, but a lot of states state something along the same lines as florida, "When you sign your drivers license you have agreed to take these [sobriety] tests upon request."Citation Required
Yeah, this kid was a train wreck from A to Z and someone we spent a LOT of time trying to fix. This incident found his BAC almost 4 times the legal limit. The funny part was he was observed and ultimately turned in by the SAPR barracks watch !!!! Don't ask![]()