Drunk Driving / DUI Statistics

In 2002…
DRUNK DRIVERS IN THE U.S. KILLED 17,000 MEN, WOMEN, AND CHILDREN! (5% MORE THAN THE PREVIOUS YEAR, 2001)

When you drink – please don’t drive -
we’re NOT getting any safer at it!

Drunk Driving Laws by State, and
the Penalties for DUI/DWI Violation (March 2004).

All 50 states and the District of Columbia have per se laws defining it as a crime to drive with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at or above a proscribed level, usually 0.08 percent.

License suspension or revocation traditionally follows conviction for alcohol-impaired driving. Under a procedure called administrative license suspension, licenses are taken before conviction when a driver fails or refuses to take a chemical test. Because administrative license suspension laws are independent of criminal procedures and are invoked right after arrest, they’ve been found to be more effective than traditional post-conviction sanctions. Forty-two states and the District of Columbia have administrative license suspension laws.

Forty-three states permit some offenders to drive only if their vehicles have been equipped with ignition interlocks. These devices analyze a driver’s breath and disable the ignition if the driver has been drinking.

In 29 states, multiple offenders may forfeit vehicles that are driven while impaired by alcohol.

Forty-two states and Washington D.C. have laws prohibiting the driver, passengers or both from possessing an open container of alcohol in the passenger compartment of a vehicle.

State

BAC Defined as illegal per se

Administrative license suspension 1st offense?1

Restore driving privileges during suspension?1,2

Do penalties include interlock / forfeiture?3

Open container laws

Alabama

0.08

90 days

no

no/no

driver / passenger

Alaska

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver

Arizona

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Arkansas

0.08

120 days

yes

yes/yes

California

0.08

4 months

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Colorado

0.10

3 months

yes

yes/no

Connecticut

0.08

90 days

yes

no/no

Delaware

0.10

3 months

no

yes/no

District of Columbia

0.08

2-90 days

yes

no/no

driver / passenger

Florida

0.08

6 months

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Georgia

0.08

1 year

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Hawaii

0.08

3 months

after 30 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

Idaho

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

Illinois

0.08

3 months

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Indiana

0.08

180 days

after 30 days

yes/no

driver4

Iowa

0.08

180 days

after 90 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

Kansas

0.08

30 days

no

yes/no

driver

Kentucky

0.08

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Louisiana

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver

Maine

0.08

90 days

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Maryland

0.08

45 days

yes

yes/no

driver / passenger

Massachusetts

0.08

90 days

no

no/no

driver / passenger

Michigan

0.085

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Minnesota

0.10

90 days

after 15 days

no/yes

driver / passenger

Mississippi

0.08

90 days

no

yes/yes

Missouri

0.08

30 days

no

yes/yes

Montana

0.08

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Nebraska

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

Nevada

0.08

90 days

after 45 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

New Hampshire

0.08

6 months

no

yes/no

driver / passenger

New Jersey

0.08

yes/no

driver / passenger

New Mexico

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/no

driver / passenger

New York

0.08

variable6

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

North Carolina

0.08

30 days

after 10 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

North Dakota

0.08

91 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Ohio

0.08

90 days

after 15 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Oklahoma

0.08

180 days

yes

yes/yes

driver

Oregon

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Pennsylvania

0.08

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Rhode Island

0.08

yes/yes

driver

South Carolina

0.08

yes/yes

driver / passenger

South Dakota

0.08

no/no

driver / passenger

Tennessee

0.08

yes/yes

driver7

Texas

0.08

90 days

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Utah

0.08

90 days

no

yes/no

driver / passenger

Vermont

0.08

90 days

no

no/yes

driver / passenger

Virginia

0.08

7 days

no

yes/no

Washington

0.08

90 days

after 30 days

yes/yes

driver / passenger

West Virginia

0.08
(eff. 05/05/04)

6 months

after 30 days

yes/no

Wisconsin

0.08

6 months

yes

yes/yes

driver / passenger

Wyoming

0.08

90 days

yes

no/no

driver

1Information pertains to drivers in violation of the BAC defined as illegal per se for all drivers, not the special BAC for young drivers.

2Drivers usually must demonstrate special hardship to justify restoring privileges during suspension, and then privileges often are restricted.

3A multiple offender’s vehicle may be seized and disposed.

4In Indiana, the open container restriction only applies if the driver has a BAC of 0.04.

5The 0.08 per se BAC law in Michgan contains a sunset clause which states that the legal BAC will revert to 0.10 on October 1, 2013.

6In New York, administrative license suspension lasts until prosecution