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Driver License Restoration Is Counterintuitive
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| Michael G. Brock, MA, LLP, LMSW |
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Michael G. Brock, MA, LLP, LMSW is a private practice Mental Health Professional in Wyandotte,
MI providing driver's license evaluations in the State of Michigan.
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DRIVER LICENSE RESTORATION IS COUNTERINTUITIVE
(As Appeared in the Detroit Legal News 6/17/2009)
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One of the more rewarding aspects of my practice is driver license restoration evaluations
for people who have lost their license though drinking and driving and are appealing to the
DAAD to get it back. As attorneys all know, the process is a difficult one, and requires
the ability of the client to demonstrate clear and convincing evidence that he or she has
been sober/abstinent at least a year and has high probability of remaining so. They don't
all have to be committed members of AA to achieve this; sometimes it is sufficient to show
that there has been a substantial change in lifestyle sufficient to escape the gravitational
pull of the alcoholic milieu; a gravitational pull that should not be underestimated.
When these clients come in to my office they are able to provide a convincing argument that
they have been sober the requisite amount of time, and often years longer. However, they
are also often inclined to downplay the seriousness of their problem with alcohol and/or
other drugs, and offer an argument to the effect of, "I wasn't that bad." Their intuition
tells them that they are going into a quasi-legal process and that in any legal process it
is a good idea to minimize the seriousness of their wrong doing and portray the offending
behavior as an aberration. In most cases, they are probably right.
First offenders and persons for whom a misdemeanor (or sometimes even felony) charge is
seen as a once time deviation from socially acceptable behavior will generally be given
the benefit of the doubt, especially in Wayne County, where jail overcrowding has become a
major problem. First offender drunk drivers usually are allowed to plead to Driving While
Impaired and given probation and a restricted license for three months. First time non-violent
felony offenders are frequently offered the HYTA diversion program, and if they don't mess up,
the offense is removed from their record.
When it comes to a driver license appeal, however, nothing could be more damaging than to
downplay the seriousness of the problem. If clients tell me, "I wasn't that bad," I can become
very confrontational. I say if you weren't that bad, why did you get two or three DUIs, and
why did you find it necessary to quit drinking? I tell them that any degree of loss of control
is unacceptable. If they lose control of their drinking and get a DUI one percent of the time
and if they drink everyday and get arrested each time they lose control, at the end of the year
they have three DUIs and are working on a fourth. Moreover, if they had control of their
drinking they wouldn't be coming to me for this evaluation.
I read other therapists' evaluations, and many of them also seem to suffer the same delusion
that if they minimize the client's drinking he will have a better chance of getting his license
back. In truth, there are two things a client has to convince the DAAD hearing officer of:
1. That he is an alcoholic, and;
2. That he is doing every thing he needs to do to arrest the problem.
Any other approach is going to be seen as denial. People in AA generally understand this from
their AA training, but many alcoholics have other ways of treating their problems; they may
become involved in church, have a good family support system, and a network of positive,
sober friends. It is a lot easier to prove sobriety with AA involvement, but it is by no
means the only way.
It is those who choose another means of establishing and maintaining abstinence who are most
likely to follow their intuition when approaching an alcohol evaluation, however, and I think
it is the duty of the attorneys who represent them to tell them like it is, and encourage
them to put their defensiveness aside if they are going to have any chance in a hearing.
First, the substance abuse evaluation has to reflect an acceptance of the alcohol/drug problem;
then the client has to demonstrate the same acceptance of and determination to permanently solve
the substance abuse problem in his or her DAAD hearing if they hope to have any chance of getting
their license back.
A year later, they must demonstrate that they have driven without incident on the interlock device,
as well as displaying consistency in their attitude toward their substance dependence and commitment
to recovery if they expect to have the interlock device removed, restrictions on their license lifted,
and full driving privileges restored.
Legal counsel should apprise his client of the reality of this situation before he goes for his SA
evaluation. If there are attorneys out there who don't think a mental health professional should
be giving lawyers advice, I would simply say that this may be the one time in the legal arena where
what the mental health professional and the client have to say may be more important to the success
of his case than what the attorney says. The client must speak for himself, first, through the MHP,
then directly to the hearing officer. If he is seen as being in denial, there is little counsel can
do to affect the outcome of the hearing.
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To learn more about the process, you can read these published articles by Michael Brock:
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Contact Michael G. Brock, MA, LLP, LMSW
today at 313-802-0863, or browse the website for more information
Michael’s services.
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