DUI Bills

Passed:

HB 69 DUI Testing Amendments requires the Department of Health and Human Services to screen blood and urine samples for both drugs and alcohol. We worked with the sponsor to remove the provision allowing these findings to be used to determine probable cause of DUI. This bill passed.

HB 273 Sentencing Modifications for Certain DUI Offenses passed. This bill was brought forward due to the issue of victim notification in automobile homicide cases. Victims’ families would receive a notice saying that the offender may be released as early as one year and the victims’ families had the option to testify at the hearing in opposition. Although we are not aware of any offenders who have been released after only one year, the sponsor’s solution to this issue was to create a minimum mandatory incarceration sentence for automobile homicide of five to fifteen years. Our organization is strongly opposed to minimum mandatory sentences, and we believe that there is a better solution to this victim notification issue. We testified in committee regarding the importance of judicial discretion and deciding these cases on a case by case basis. We were able to get a substitute passed in the last few days that gave judges discretion to suspend the prison sentence if it is in the interest of justice and if the court details this finding on the record.

HB 395 DUI Offense Amendments was a high priority this session. This sponsor routinely runs DUI omnibus bills that increase penalties and restrict the ability to negotiate case resolutions.  This bill started out much worse. The final version does six bad things and one good thing: 

  1. Creates a presumption of detention after arrest if a person was on pretrial release, probation, or parole for DUI and is arrested for a subsequent DUI, but also creates a rebuttable presumption of release if the court orders the person to participate in an inpatient drug and alcohol treatment program or home confinement through the use of electronic monitoring

  2. Increases the penalty for wrong way DUI drivers from a Class B to a Class A

  3. Provides that a felony offense of “refusal to submit” to a chemical test becomes enhanceable for life, with every subsequent also being a felony

  4. Provides that out of state felonies may be used to enhance penalties in Utah for life (previously limited to a 10-year enhancement period)

  5. Requires the Sentencing Commission to create stricter guidelines for DUI with injury or death, extreme DUIs, and interlock violations

  6. Provides that the time period for interlock doesn’t start until it is installed, even if a person doesn’t drive in the intervening period

  7. Requires the Department of Public Safety to waive participation and testing fees for indigent individuals participating in the 24-7 sobriety program

Failed:

HB 304 Alcohol Control Amendments would have allowed an individual to obtain a DUI investigative report if the individual suffered loss or injury as a result of the defendant's actions. It also would have prohibited the expungement of a felony DUI conviction even if the court enters a judgment for conviction to a lower degree of offense. This bill was never heard in committee.

HB 445 Indigent Defense Funding Amendments ran out of time, but would have required the Department of Public Safety to waive participation and testing fees entirely or in part for indigent individuals participating in the 24-7 sobriety program. However, this provision was adopted in the final version of HB 395, which passed.

HB 568 Intermittent Sentencing Amendments would have created a sheriff's work program in which prisoners participate in supervised community service instead of serving time in jail. It was never heard in committee.