News Briefs
The New Informing the Accused Form
1997
Wis. Act 107, effective Aug. 1, 1998, clarifies the language used in
the Informing the Accused form, making it easier for both police
officers and arrested drivers to understand. The new form reads:
"You have either been arrested for an offense that involves driving
or operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, or both, or you are suspected of driving or being on duty time
with respect to a commercial motor vehicle after consuming an
intoxicating beverage.
"This law enforcement agency now wants to test one or more samples of
your breath, blood or urine to determine the concentration of alcohol or
drugs in your system. If any test shows more alcohol in your system than
the law permits while driving, your operating privilege will be
suspended. If you refuse to take any test that this agency requests,
your operating privilege will be revoked and you will be subject to
other penalties. The test results or the fact that you refused testing
can be used against you in court.
"If you take all the requested tests, you may choose to take further
tests. You may take the alternative test that this law enforcement
agency provides free of charge. You also may have a test conducted by a
qualified person of your choice at your expense. You, however, will have
to make your own arrangements for that test.
"If you have a commercial driver license or were operating a
commercial motor vehicle, other consequences may result from positive
test results or from refusing testing, such as being placed out of
service or disqualified."
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Informing the Accused form rewritten in plain English
By Ralph A. Kalal
Wisconsin's new Informing the Accused form, which becomes effective
Aug. 1, may end much of the litigation in drunk driving cases.
The Informing the Accused form is read by law enforcement officers to
drivers who have been arrested for drunk driving before requesting a
chemical test of breath, blood, or urine under the Implied Consent Law.
It contains information about the driver's duty to take whatever tests
the police request and the law enforcement agency's duty to then allow
the driver additional tests.
Past versions of the form used cumbersome legalese, which frequently
confused drivers and police officers about its meaning, resulting in
needless litigation.
1997
Wis. Act 107 should eliminate much of this confusion. Its chief
sponsor, Rep. John LaFave, assembled attorneys and others with expertise
in this area, including representatives of the State Bar, the Department
of Transportation, the Legislative Reference Bureau, and the Wisconsin
Association of Chiefs of Police, to rewrite the statute that designates
the form's language. Now rewritten in plain English, the form (see
sidebar below) is half its former length and more explicit about what
the law requires.
The old form could be read two ways: as requiring a driver to submit
to all tests that the police request, or allowing the driver to select
which test he or she takes. The new form states the agency wants to test
"one or more samples" and that refusal of any test results in a
refusal revocation.
The new form also addresses other problems:
- The new form expressly tells the driver that he or she has been
arrested a condition precedent to Implied Consent Law testing
that wasn't mentioned in the old form.
- By saying that the law enforcement agency "now" wants the driver to
submit to tests, the new form clarifies that merely submitting to a
preliminary breath test does not satisfy the driver's obligation.
- The old form was unclear about when the driver could take other
tests and who would pay for them. The new form makes it clear that there
are "free" police tests; that a driver also has the right to an
alternate test at agency expense; and that a driver has the right to
choose another test at his or her own expense, but the driver must first
submit to all police-requested tests.
- The new streamlined form eliminates the separate warnings given to
drivers holding commercial driver's licenses.
Attorney Ralph A. Kalal is the senior
member of Kalal & Associates, a Madison firm that concentrates in
OMVWI defense and other criminal cases. Kalal was the State Bar's
representative to the advisory committee that helped draft the new
Informing the Accused legislation.
Guides offer advice on legal information management
The American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) recently released
three resource guides on legal information management for law firms. The
guides, "How to Hire a Law Librarian," "Expanding Roles for Law
Librarians," and "Space Planning for Law Libraries," are the first three
releases in a planned eight-volume series of resource guides on this
topic.
The eight-part series is $60 for AALL members and $80 for nonmembers.
Copies of individual guides are $11.25 for members; $12.50 for
nonmembers. For more information about the series, or to order, contact
Steve Serpas at (312) 939-4764, or by email at orders@aall.org.
Araiza earns writing award
Milwaukee attorney Francisco
Araiza is this year's winner of the Hon. Charles Dunn Author
Award. Araiza is recognized by the State Bar's Communications Committee
for his September 1997 Wisconsin Lawyer article, "Se Habla
Everything: The Right to an Impartial, Qualified Interpreter."
The Dunn Award, named after Wisconsin's first chief justice,
recognizes writing excellence in articles published in the
Wisconsin Lawyer. Communications Committee Award
Subcommittee members Jesse Ishikawa, Rob Petershack, and Ann Massie
Nelson chose Araiza's article for its thorough and skillful discussion
of the theoretical and practical issues that arise in obtaining an
impartial and qualified interpreter.
"Araiza brings complicated due process issues to life through the
skillful use of courtroom anecdotes and provides very practical advice,
including a toll-free number for AT&T's language lines," says
Ishikawa, the award subcommittee chair.
Q: What Wisconsin appellate judge "grilled" U.S. Sen.
Barry Goldwater on national television in 1956?
The Litigation Section's Appellate Practice Subcommittee tests your
knowledge of Wisconsin's appellate judges. For the answer to this
month's question, CLICK
HERE!
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Araiza, an assistant state public defender in Milwaukee, receives a
plaque at the Board of Governors luncheon on June 24 during the State
Bar Annual Convention.
Two additional authors receive certificates of commendation for their
work in the Wisconsin Lawyer. Alexander T.
Pendleton is honored for his November 1997 article "Drafting
Enforceable Exculpatory Agreements" and John E.
Flanagan for his February 1997 article "The Duty of Good Faith
in Contracts: Mutual Expectations Set the Parameters."
New divorce/annulment certificates available in late June
1997
Wis. Act 191, effective May 1, 1998, amends Wisconsin
Statute 69.17 to mandate the reporting of Social Security numbers on
Wisconsin Divorce/Annulment Certificates (DOH 5080). Social Security
numbers are collected for the husband, wife, and any children listed in
the confidential section of the certificate, and are used for child
support enforcement purposes only.
Revised forms will be available from clerks of court by the end of
June. After receiving new forms from your clerk of court, destroy any
old forms you may have, advises Peggy Peterson, assistant state
registrar, Center for Health Statistics.
Once the new forms are available, there will be a 30-day grace period
in which old forms are still accepted for filing.
For further information, contact Peggy Peterson, (608) 267-7812, or
by email.
Figuratively Speaking
- Percentage of blacks in the U.S. who are excluded from jury service
as a result of the common practice of relying upon voter lists in the
jury selection process: 14
- Percentage of Hispanics excluded: 52
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere."
-- Martin Luther King Jr.
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- Percentage of those with an annual income of less than $5,000
excluded: 28.7
- Percentage of those earning between $5,000 and $9,999 excluded:
20.9
Source: Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law, Vol. 4,
No. 3
- Annual number of American children who are injured severely enough
to require emergency room treatment while playing on playgrounds,
according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC):
200,000
- Percentage of injury and fatality cases involving children and
playgrounds that resulted in lawsuits but were settled out of court,
according to a University of Texas study of 177 playground injuries and
13 fatalities: 81
- Percentage of lawsuits that went to trial: 9
- Percentage of all cases that involved violations of safety
guidelines established by the CPSC and the American Society for Testing
and Materials: 94
Source: American City and Country, Vol. 112, Issue 4, April 4,
1997
- Estimated number of women stalked each year in the U.S., based on
the results of a survey of 8,000 men and 8,000 women: 1
million
- Estimated number of men who are stalked each year:
370,000
- Percentage of victims who file police reports:
50
- Approximate percentage who file restraining orders:
25
- Percentage of cases that involved overt threats:
45
- Percentage of stalkers who threatened to or actually did kill the
victim's pet: 10
- Percentage of recorded stalking cases in which the stalker spied on
or followed the victim: 75
Source: U.S. News & World Report, Vol. 123, No. 20, Nov. 24,
1997
Wisconsin Lawyer