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If he is impaired, I don't care what the substance is.
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It would probably have been easier to bring charges against his erratic driving than to punish the cause...either way, I'm glad he got pulled over.
Jay
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California's DUI law bans driving a vehicle under the influence of any drug. Caffeine is a drug. If a person is under the effect of caffeine to the extent that it impairs a person's ability to safely operate a vehicle, they are DUI. I'll bet dollars to donuts if this guy brings a lawsuit based on a DUI for caffeine, it will go nowhere.
Bill
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Quote:California's DUI law bans driving a vehicle under the influence of any drug. Caffeine is a drug. If a person is under the effect of caffeine to the extent that it impairs a person's ability to safely operate a vehicle, they are DUI. I'll bet dollars to donuts if this guy brings a lawsuit based on a DUI for caffeine, it will go nowhere.
Bill
Agreed, a suit will go nowhere, and DUI is distinctive in that the substance is not the issue. Further, pulling people over does not generate funds, only tickets that actually generate fines, which not all will do.
A few years back I was next to a big muscled knothead that was having a meltdown because he missed the light. Clearly a case of roid rage, and he should have been pulled over, tazed a few times, and then ticketed. The signal changed and he lit the tires up and burned through the intersection. He was certainly not drunk, but he was clearly impaired and a danger to society.The spirit of the law deals with impairment, not intoxication, and that has included (historically) fatigue, prescription meds, and driving without your glasses if they are required.
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If I understand you guys correctly, you don't care how unsafely a person is driving, so long as you agree with their impairing substance of choice. If someone is so hyped on on speed, (and yes, caffeine is a form of speed), that they are driving so errectically that they put thmselves and others on the road at risk, you would still give them a pass because you like your Starbucks caramel macchiato?
Bill
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You guys should really read the actual story. It wasn't the CHP who pulled him over, it was an ABC agent, in an unmarked car who felt the drive cut her off an changed lanes unsafely:
"Schwab was driving home from work when he was pulled over by an agent from the <a class="" href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/california">California</a> department of alcoholic beverage control, who was driving an unmarked vehicle. The agent said Schwab had cut her off and was driving erratically.
The 36-year-old union glazier was given a breathalyzer test which showed a 0.00% blood alcohol level, his attorney said. He was booked into county jail and had his blood drawn, but the resulting toxicology report came back negative for benzodiazepines, cocaine, opiates, THC, carisoprodol (a muscle relaxant), methamphetamine/MDMA, oxycodone, and zolpidem.
The sample was screened a second time by a laboratory in Pennsylvania, according to documents provided to the Guardian, where the sole positive result was for caffeine – a substance likely coursing through the veins of many drivers on the road at any given time."
The charges were also not filed until 10 MONTHS after the arrest.
Sounds to me like an over zealous ABC agent who is trying to flex her muscle. They will lose this case, they will settle the ensuing lawsuit. This is a complete joke and whoever is wasting the taxpayers money by pushing forward to take this to court should be fired.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016...ano-county
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Look at some of the symtoms of caffeine overspdose listed below. I don't think someone should drive who is experiencing hallucinations, confusion, uncontrolled muscle movement, and convulsions, even if it's from coffee. The issue isn't the substance, it's the impairment caused by the substance, regarless of the nature of the substance involved.
Bill
What Are the Symptoms of Caffeine Overdose?
Symptoms
Several types of symptoms occur with this condition. Some symptoms may not immediately alert you that you have had too much caffeine because they may not seem serious. For example, you may experience:
dizziness
diarrhea
increased thirst
insomnia
headache
fever
irritability
Other symptoms are more severe and call for immediate medical treatment. These more serious symptoms of caffeine overdose include:
trouble breathing
vomiting
hallucinations
confusion
chest pain
irregular or fast heartbeat
uncontrollable muscle movements
convulsions
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Dan, you still seem to be focusing on the substance instead of the impairment. Either you don't beleive that an overdose of caffeine can actually have a negative impact on driving ability, or you beleive that caffeine addled drivers should have a free pass, regardless of how much danger they present to themselves and others. I guess I can understand your position IF you don't beleive any amount of caffeine can possibly diminish driving ability. Of course such a belief is clearly inaccurate from a scientific standpoint. Your apparent fear that everyone will now be DUI because they had a cup of coffee is not well grounded. No one is suggesting a per se caffeine law, such as we have for alcohol. No one is calling for "drink a cappuccino, go to jail". To get a conviction, the prosecution would still have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was actually impaired to the extent that they could not operate a motor vehicle in a reasonably safe manner. Such proof includes the officer's empirical observations of the erratic driving. Do you really beleive that it is virtually impossible for an overdose of caffeine to render a person in such a condition? Or do you beleive that a person driving in a dangerous manner due to impairment should be allowed to drive if the impairment was the result of a caffeine overdose? Or is it that you just don't beleive it is possible to OD on caffeine?
Bill
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Dan, you obviously don't get it. You would give a free pass to someone driving while convulsing, hallucinating, and experiencing uncontrolled muscle movement. Most of the rest of us wouldn't. And don't kid yourself that caffeine isn't a stimulant. At least if you're the guy who gets creamed by the impeded driver, you can always sit in your wheelchair and say "it's o.k., it was only caffeine".
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Dan, you still are missing the point. I agree that a person being so under the influence of caffeine that it impedes their ability to drive is a very rare occurance. But it's not impossible, it can happen. If it does happen, should the person be subject to a DUI because they were under the unfluence of any drug, as the law provides, or should the person get a pass beause the drug involved is caffeine? Your hypothetical about a person being ill is not relevant, as the statute in question does not address such a situation. Rather it addresses impairment caused by drugs, any drug. It is not uncommon for people to be impaired by medication. I, for one, shouldn't be driving if I take Actifed for allergies. If I were to drive in such a state, wove all over the road, and crashed into a telephone pole, I could easily be prosecuted for DUI. That doesn't mean that everyone driving on Actifed will be subject to conviction for DUI. It really is quite simple: if your driving is impaired to the extent that you cannot safely operate a motor vehicle due to ingestion of any drug, you are DUI. If you are driving safely, regardless of any drug in your system, you are not DUI. The only exception in California is alcohol where, if you have a certain amount in your system, you are per se DUI. No one is calling for DUI's for everyone who had a cup of coffee with breakfast.
It comes down to this:
1. Do you beleive it is possible, regardless of how rare, for a person to overdose on caffeine to the extent that it results in unsafe driving?
If your answer is "yes", then
2. Should that person who is driving in an unsafe manner get a pass because the drug involved is caffeine?
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