Palos Verdes Estates, DUI & Resisting Arrest, Dismissal
Police officers miraculously noticed him speeding and gave chase. With sirens blaring and lights flashing, three police officers tailed our client, who refused to pull over. As our client reached the vacant lot that he intended to drive across to reach the cliff’s edge, a police car cut him off, causing our client to skid to a stop.Summary: Palos Verdes Estates, DUI and resisting arrest (Penal Code § 148(a)(1) case dismissed on our motion to dismiss in Torrance courthouse.
Police then surrounded the car with guns drawn and wrestled our client to the ground. Our client allegedly punched two of the officers in the mouth during the arrest.
After being taken to the Palos Verdes Estates Police Department, he was arraigned in the Torrance Superior Court two days later (he did not post bail). The judge then released our client on his own recognizance (OR). He was charged with misdemeanor resisting arrest and DUI, his second DUI. The client had an extensive record for various drug related charges, as well as vandalism, trespassing, forgery and petty theft.
He was arrested several times in San Diego and told of the bench warrant for him in Torrance, but was never transported to Torrance. Our client also did not voluntarily come to Torrance to address the bench warrant.
Then in 2012, the client moved to Utah, where he received a steady job as a cook for the Mormon Church. Yet in a routine background check, the church notified him of the warrant from the Torrance Superior Court. The church told him he no longer could continue cooking for it unless he had the warrant set aside and it no longer showed on his background check.
The client thought the warrant from the Torrance Court would just drop off when he failed to show up after a while. As he found out, warrants do not expire. The reason is judges and law enforcement certainly do not want to reward someone who plays “hide and seek” long enough.
The client then called our office and asked what he should do. Greg Hill immediately spotted a speedy trial issue, or, in legal terms, the deprivation of one’s due process right to a speedy trial under the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This is a right that California courts have upheld in several well-known decision such as Serna v. Superior Court (1985) 40 Cal.3d 239, 707 P.2d 793, 219 Cal. Rptr. 420 (applying only to misdemeanor cases) and People v. Johnson (1980) 26 Cal.3d 557, 571, quoting In re Bergerow (1901) 133 Cal. 49, 355.
For more information about what to do if stopped for DUI, having one’s arrest record sealed and destroyed and the common plea bargain terms for a first-time DUI, click on the following articles:
- 10 Things to Do If Stopped for DUI
- How Do I Have My Arrest Record Sealed and Destroyed?
- What Punishment Do I Face for a First-Time DUI?
Watch our video about DUI by clicking here.
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