San Diego DUI Attorney
Richard Katzman
As a skilled San Diego DUI Attorney, I provide legal representation of the highest order for drunk driving clients in San Diego County and throughout Southern California, in the following practice areas:
- Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol or Drugs (DUI)
- Misdemeanor
- 1st Offense
- Repeat Offenses
- Misdemeanor
- Felony
- Serious Repeat Offender
- Accident with serious injury or death
- DUI Manslaughter
- DUI Murder
- DUI with a child passenger
- Hit and Run Driving
- Reckless Driving
- Contests of Speed
- Driving on a Suspended License
- Other Traffic Crimes
- Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) or other state licensing agency Suspension/Revocation Hearings
- DUI Conviction
- Chemical Test Refual
- Medical or Drug Suspension
- Negligent Operator (too many tickets) Suspension
For most people, a DUI arrest brings a high level of fear. The very thought of being in jail raises concerns about personal safety and the suspension or revocation of a driver's license can have ruinous consequences on many levels. People sometimes lose their jobs, and the financial implications of a DUI can be staggering. If you are arrested for drunk driving, you need a lawyer who knows your concerns and will fight for your rights.
Prosecutors know me as a formidable courtroom opponent, and they know the depth of research and preparation to be expected at trial. Ironically, this unfailing preparation and readiness to fight it out in court often produces extraordinary results without need for a trial.
You can be assured that I will personally handle every aspect of your case. I do not employ paralegals or associates. I will meet with you at the initial free consultation. I will obtain and review the police report with you. I will make all the court appearances required for the proper presentation of your case. I will do all of the research on your case and meet with the prosecutor in an attempt to get your case in the best position for a favorable resolution.
I am very accessible to my clients and receive telephone calls after normal working hours and on weekends. I also am available for meetings after hours and on weekends. The greatest compliment I can receive is having an old client refer a new case or return with a new problem.
I have practiced Criminal Defense Law in California for almost twenty years. I aggressively defend my clients. My goal is to educate them to the applicable law so that they may make informed decisions regarding their cases. I do not promise prospective clients things they want to hear such as, "If you hire me there will be no jail time," just so I will be hired.
My approach is to inform and educate my clients so they can make realistic decisions with regard to their immediate problem.
I am also licensed to practice law in Colorado, Nevada, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Primarily, I deal with Criminal Defense cases. However, I do handle Personal Injury, Immigration, and Debt Relief Cases.
If you or someone you know in Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced San Diego DUI Attorney, call Richard Katzman today at 866-679-2806, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free consultation.
Driving with a Suspended License:
Driving with a suspended or revoked license is usually charged as a serious misdemeanor punishable by substantial fines and up to a year in jail. Under some circumstances, as where someone is killed or injured in an accident caused by a driver whose license is suspended or revoked, the offense can be charged as a felony, with a high fine and a possible state prison sentence. Fines and jail sentences are typically heaviest in cases where the license suspension or revocation resulted from a traffic offense involving alcohol and/or drugs.
Reckless Driving:
Reckless driving is operating a vehicle with willful or wanton disregard for the safety of others or the property of others. It generally involves drastic misconduct on the road, such as driving on the wrong side of the road or driving at dangerously high speeds. It is generally charged as a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine and a local jail sentence. It sometimes results in a driver's license suspension or revocation, and it very often results in the cancellation of insurance. Automobile insurance companies know that people who drive “recklessly” are more likely than others to get in traffic accidents. Also, “reckless driving” convictions are commonly seen as part of a plea bargain in which an initial DUI charge is “reduced” to reckless driving.
Hit and Run Driving:
Hit and Run Driving is a serious offense that involves leaving the scene of an accident without first stopping and identifying oneself to the other driver or drivers. It is, at minimum, a serious misdemeanor punishable by jail time and a high fine. If someone is injured or killed in the accident, hit and run driving is charged as a felony that can result in a state prison sentence. In either case the charge has nothing to do with who was at fault in the accident. Apart from the other penalties, hit and run driving can result in long-term driver's license suspension or, in some cases, actual license revocation.
Driving Under the Influence (DUI):
DUI stands for Driving Under the Influence and occurs when someone is operating, or is in actual physical control, of a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or other controlled substance, to the extent that their mental faculties are impaired and/or their blood alcohol content (BAC) is above the legal limit. Even for a first offense, penalties can include license suspension, substantial fines, community service, mandatory attendance at a state or DMV approved alcohol program, mandatory overnight incarceration and the required installation (at the offender's expense) of a car ignition locking device. In addition, it typically results in higher insurance premiums and an offender may become ineligible for credit.
Driving Under the Influence – Murder:
Murder is the criminal charge for unlawfully killing someone, either deliberately and intentionally or recklessly with extreme disregard for human life. In some states, when someone driving under the influence causes an accident in which someone is killed the driver may be charged with murder if the circumstances are particularly aggravated.
Driving Under the Influence – Manslaughter:
Manslaughter is the criminal charge for unlawfully killing someone without actually intending to do so. When someone is driving under the influence and causes an accident in which someone is killed, the driver may be charged with manslaughter.
Driving Under the Influence with Prior Convictions:
In all 50 states, repeat DUI offenders face progressively stiffer penalties. In some states, the third or fourth offense may be charged as a felony and, upon a conviction, result in a multi-year state prison term. The elements of the offense are the same, whether or not there are prior convictions.
Driving Under the Influence of Drugs or Prescription Medications:
Most people know that it is illegal to drive under the influence of illegal drugs, but many believe they can avoid a conviction for DUI by producing a prescription for the drug in question. This is not true. A DUI (drugs) charge has nothing to do with whether or not possession of the drug was lawful. The legal issue in any DUI case is whether, as the result of "impairment," the driver has lost the ability to drive safely. It is just as unlawful to drive under the influence of a properly prescribed medication as it is to drive after drinking too much alcohol.
Contests of Speed (Drag Racing):
In most states, engaging in contests of speed (racing) is a serious misdemeanor punishable by local jail time and a fine. It can also trigger license suspension or revocation by the Department of Motor Vehicles or other state licensing agency. It is also fairly certain to result in cancellation of automobile insurance. Repeat offenders usually face escalating penalties including felony prosecution in aggravated circumstances.
Other Traffic Crimes:
Every state has its own set of laws governing the operation of motor vehicles on public streets and highways. Most of these laws classify violations as infractions - relatively minor offenses for which a fine is the only penalty. One cannot be given a jail sentence for an infraction. It can be very important to fight infraction prosecutions in some situations. Many states have “point” systems to track individual driving records and the accumulation of too many points can have serious consequences, ranging from license suspension to revocation. Automobile insurance carriers often cancel the policies of drivers with too many “points.” The decision whether or not to fight an infraction ticket is one that should receive very careful consideration.
Administrative License Suspension Hearings:
Most states provide for administrative driver's license suspension in certain circumstances, but in every case the driver is entitled to a hearing in which the suspension can be contested. If a hearing is not requested within the time provided by law the right to a hearing is waived, and the suspension goes into effect automatically. In some cases the time for requesting a hearing is very short, and the scope of the hearing is usually very narrow and highly technical, from a legal standpoint. Self-representation at a suspension hearing is rarely successful. The different types of administrative suspension include:
- Medical/Drug Suspension
Some medical conditions require administrative driver's license suspension. These include certain diseases involving seizures, blackouts, fainting spells, serious physical coordination problems, some mental disorders and loss of vision. The defense to this type of suspension usually involves the submission of written reports from health care providers and other experts. - Negligent Driver Suspension
This involves situations in which a driver has accumulated too many “points” for traffic tickets or has been involved in an unusually high number of accidents. - Drunk Driving Suspension Based on BAC
If a defendant’s chemical test shows a BAC of .08% or more most states impose a 30 to 90 day suspension. This varies from state to state and may be longer than that. At the hearing, skilled counsel may attack the probable cause for the defendant’s detention and arrest and/or the validity of the chemical test. - Drunk Driving Suspension Based on Test Refusal
Where the defendant refuses to submit to a chemical test most states provide for a license suspension ranging from six months to a year, but in at least one state the term is three years. The refusal suspension is not affected by the outcome of a DUI trial. If there is a refusal suspension it remains in place even if the defendant is adjudged “not guilty.” At the hearing, skilled counsel may attack the probable cause for the defendant’s detention and arrest and/or the validity of the chemical test.
If you or someone you know in Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced San Diego DUI Attorney, call Richard Katzman today at 866-679-2806, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free consultation.
ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:
Richard Katzman, Attorney at Law
7676 Hazard Ctr. Dr., 5th Fl.
San Diego, CA 92108
Telephone: 866-679-2806
Fax: 619-692-9870
MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:
Richard Katzman
Richard Katzman graduated from Trinity College in Connecticut in 1980, and received his Juris Doctor with Honors from California Western School of Law, in San Diego, California. He was admitted to the California Bar in 1985.
Mr. Katzman has been self employed since the beginning of his law career. Initially, he handled a wide variety of cases. Currently, 90 percent of his legal practice involves Criminal Defense matters. The other 10 percent is made up of Personal Injury, Immigration and Debt Relief matters.
Mr. Katzman also sits as a Judge Pro Tem in the San Diego Court System as a Small Claims Judge and as a Traffic Court Judge.
Richard is 46 years old and married to Maria. They have a six-year old daughter Isabella Genevieve. Richard enjoy competitive swimming, water and alpine skiing, the WPT, reading, going to the movies, and traveling.
- Billings man acquitted in DUI case (Billings Gazette)
A Billings man has been acquitted after being charged last year with felony drunken driving when authorities alleged that he drove intoxicated to the county jail to post bond for a friend. - Murder in historic Old Town highlights safety concerns (Homer News)
[Out at his old shop on the Homer Spit, in his worn overalls and pork-pie hat, Charles "Yukon Charlie" Young, 56, looked like the rustic woodcarver he was. This week, he traded Carhartts for an orange prison jumpsuit as he appeared in court charged with first-degree murder. - Categories (Rome Sentinel)
VERNON — The Oneida Area Civic Chorale will hold registration for its first concert of the 2008-2009 season on Monday, Sept. 8, at 6:45 p.m. in the Vernon-Verona-Sherrill High School music su... - Updated 8/27: Judge admits drinking, denies driving drunk (Highland Park News)
A Lake County judge admitted Wednesday he had been drinking alcohol on the night he was arrested for drunken driving, but insisted he wasn’t intoxicated or driving erratically when he was stopped by Vernon Hills police. - Judges resist plan for DWI crackdown (ABC 13 Houston)
A planned crackdown on drunk drivers has some judges questioning law enforcement officers - Tyler police rolling out 'no-refusal' DWI program for Labor Day weekend (KLTV 7 Tyler)
8 east Texas law enforcement agencies will be out in force this Labor Day weekend looking for drunk drivers, and they say they aren't taking no for an answer. - Motorist, Firefighter Differ On Why Latter Was Slashed (The Tampa Tribune)
A Hillsborough County Fire Rescue driver-engineer and a driver whose keys he took away have different version of the confrontation that led to the firefighter having 51 staples in his leg to close a razor wound. - Oregon man tried for killing wife (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
ROSEBURG, Ore. -- A 54-year-old Roseburg man is standing trial on manslaughter and drunken driving charges in the death of his wife. - Lake Co. judge says he was drinking but did nothing illegal (Daily Herald)
Lake County Circuit Judge David Hall admitted in court today to drinking alcohol before his April 26 arrest on DUI and resisting arrest charges, but denied violating any laws. - Roseburg man tried for manslaughter in death of wife (KMTR Eugene)
The prosecution says Elbert Amos was drunk when he and his wife, Kalia, drove away from dinner in Sutherlin in January 2007.
Additional Questions or need further information?
Richard KatzmanRichard Katzman, Attorney at Law
7676 Hazard Ctr. Dr., 5th Fl.
San Diego, CA 92108
Telephone: 866-679-2806
Fax: 619-692-9870