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        <title>dui.com - North Dakota DUI</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/north-dakota</link>
        <description>DUI Library: North Dakota</description>
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                      <title>Teen Reports Her Own Drunk Driving Offense in North Dakota</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/north-dakota/teen-reports-her-own-drunk-driving-offense-in-north-dakota</link>
                      <description>17-year old calls the police to say she was driving under the influence in Bismarck.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 15:28:40 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Police in Bismarck North Dakota received a surprising phone call on New Year’s Eve. A 17-year girl called to report that she was driving under the influence. She told police her location and officers found her parked near downtown.</p>

<p>The unidentified teen failed a field sobriety test and was arrested for failing to have control of her vehicle while intoxicated. While she admitted to having driven around for hours, the underage motorist was not charged with North Dakota DUI because her keys were in her purse and the vehicle was parked at the time of the arrest.</p>

<p>Police feel her call was a plea for help. The girl said that she had been drinking for much of the previous two weeks and that she felt her life was out of control. She was released to the custody of her parents on New Year’s Day.</p>

<p>Have you been charged with <a href="http://www.dui.com/south-dakota">DUI in ND</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>North Dakota DWI Convictions Don't Apply in Minnesota</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/north-dakota/north-dakota-dwi-convictions</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>North Dakota DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>North Dakota DWI Convictions Don't Apply in Minnesota
                          Cases</strong><br />
                           Appeal to High Court Could Overturn Ruling<br />
                           BY DALE WETZEL, Associated Press BISMARCK, N.D. 

                          <p>North Dakota drunken driving convictions can't be used against drivers
                          in Minnesota cases, because North Dakota motorists may not be told of
                          their rights before they are tested for alcohol, the Minnesota Court of
                          Appeals says.</p>

                          <p>The ruling came in two appeals from Clay County, Minn., brought by two
                          arrested separately in Moorhead, Minn., in May 2004.</p>

                          <p>Nathan Schuster, 30, of neighboring Fargo, N.D., and Wade Little Owl,
                          31, of Moorhead challenged the prosecution's use of their North Dakota
                          drunken driving convictions to bring harsher Minnesota charges against
                          them for driving while impaired.</p>

                          <p>North Dakota law does not require motorists to be told of their right
                          against self-incrimination before they are given a blood or breath test.
                          Therefore, the Minnesota court ruled, the North Dakota convictions of
                          Schuster and Little Owl cannot be used against them in their Minnesota
                          cases.</p>

                          <p>Schuster has an October 1998 conviction in North Dakota for driving
                          under the influence, while Little Owl has had three North Dakota
                          convictions for DWI or refusing a breath test in the past 10 years, the
                          opinion says.</p>

                          <p>Ken Kohler, the Clay County prosecutor, said Friday that his office
                          will appeal the decision to the Minnesota Supreme Court. The ruling was
                          handed down Jan. 31. "Obviously, when you're on a border county
                          &acirc;&euro;&brvbar; a large number of people drive back and forth, and
                          if we can't use North Dakota convictions, it's difficult to hold someone
                          accountable," Kohler said. "There's a safety issue to the community in
                          allowing these individuals not to have harsher sentences for repeat DWI
                          offenses, which this certainly does."</p>

                          <p>Minnesota requires that drivers be told of their right to remain
                          silent and to speak to an attorney before they take a chemical test to
                          judge possible impairment. North Dakota Supreme Court rulings say a
                          driver must have a "reasonable opportunity" to consult a lawyer before
                          taking a test if he or she requests legal counsel. However, police are
                          not required to inform drivers of their rights.</p>

                          <p>"Because North Dakota does not require that motorists be informed of
                          their right to counsel prior to chemical testing, the right loses its
                          meaningful purpose in practical application," the appeals court's opinion
                          says. "Given that the purpose of the right to counsel is to protect
                          individuals unfamiliar with the legal system, it is implicit that those
                          individuals first be informed that such a right exists."</p>

                          <p>Wayne Stenehjem, North Dakota's attorney general, said he did not
                          believe it is necessary for law officers to routinely advise drunken
                          driving suspects of their right to a lawyer, although he said many
                          do.</p>

                          <p>In North Dakota, motorists who refuse a chemical test have their
                          driving privileges suspended for a year. Typically, attorneys tell their
                          clients they must choose whether to take the test or have their licenses
                          taken, Stenehjem said.</p>

                          <p>"There's not a whole lot of expert legal advice that any attorney can
                          give in that situation," Stenehjem said. "I've done this. This is what
                          you tell them. If you don't consent to the test, then that means you're
                          going to lose your license for a year &acirc;&euro;&brvbar; if there was
                          probable cause to arrest you in the first place."</p>

                          <p>Source: http://www.twincities.com/</p>
                        ]]>
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