At Lombardi Law we make it a point to blog about the issues that affect those who are effected by accidents. Call us for a FREE evaluation of your case 1-800-383-0331.

The Lombardi Law Firm Blog

Here at the Lombardi Law Firm we add blog content that is personal to those involved in accidents. We write this way so you have an understanding of how we think and handle cases - your case. We invite you to call us if you think we can help you resolve your legal problems. We settle most of our cases, because we do the basic legal work necessary to understand the facts of your case. We offer on our website, relevant and concise information that you will be helpful to you as you get ready to settle or to try your case. 

We can and will do the same for you. That's my promise.

Steve Lombardi, 515-222-1110 or sdlombardi@aol.com 

Welcome to the Lombardi Law Firm website. If you or an interested person are in a collision and you would like the crash analyzed you'll need to contact Attorney Lombardi. This may or may not result in an attorney-client relationship and simply asking for a review does not in and of itself create such a relationship. If you ask and Mr. Lombardi thinks you have a case he will say so and provide an agreement for representation that then creates an attorney-client relationship. The bottom line is that Mr. Lombardi has to agree to take you on as a client; the first step of course is asking him. You've got two ways: telephone 515-222-1110 or email sent to sdlombardi@aol.com.
We try to make Steve Lombardiour website an interesting source of information for all people who may have suffered an injury or whose relatives have been injured or killed. We attempt to provide information that makes you more aware of how to avoid injury and death.  We are here to assist you to stay safe and with your legal problems. Call us if you have legal questions or if you have safety concerns. (515-222-1110) We are willing to assist you in finding answers to your questions and regularly write about safety measures that readers bring to our attention. Good luck on the job and be safe. Steve Lombardi is a personal injury lawyer in Iowa, but prides himself on doing more than just practicing law.  Email: sdlombardi@aol.com

If you, your spouse or a member of your family or friends are involved in any kind of accident contact the Lombardi Law Firm. We can assist you with your claim. Steve Lombardi has more than 30 years of experience in civil litigation including death and injury cases for workers and their spouses from car, semi-truck, motorcycle, pedestrian and construction accidents and injuries. We don't charge you to talk with Mr. Lombardi to find out if you have a case. Don't delay, call him today. (515-222-1110 or sdlombardi@aol.com)

Know your rights, act proactively and protect yourself.



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10/2/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Leaving the scene of an accident and Iowa's drunk driver

What lawyer can help me prove who was driving the car that struck my family? If the driver leaves the scene what can I do? sdlombardi@aol.com

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

9/17/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driver Car Accidents – Are the passengers and pedestrians at fault?

Can pedestrians and passengers be at fault when the driver is drunk or do I get compensation either way? The answer depends on the facts of your case. Why?

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

8/28/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driving Charge Leads Homicide By Vehicle Charge

Iowa Drunk Driver and Car Accident Legal Analysis and Commentary contact Steve Lombardi at 515-222-1110 or sdlombardi@aol.com.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

8/28/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driver Accident Has Des Moines Officer Fighting for his Life

Iowa Drunk Driving Accident Legal Analysis and Commentary contact Steve Lombardi at 515-222-1110 or sdlombardi@aol.com

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

7/8/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Eye-In-The-Sky Kaching-Cameras! Go Live on Independence Day

Involved in an Iowa car accident and need answers? Try the Lombardi Law Firm website. www.lombardilaw.com or 515-222-1110.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

4/11/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Supplying Alcohol to a Minor Charged

If you’re involved in an Iowa rollover personal injury accident you need to read the information on the Lombardi Law Firm website. www.lombardilaw.com or sdlombardi@aol.com. 515-222-1110.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

3/11/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driving News for March 11, 2011

Today let’s go with this one news item from the Omaha World-Herald. If you want to know how summary driver license revocation hearings can be read this story. Play this melancholy music to back you up and to put all of this in the right perspective. The artwork is rally intriguing but the collage is different to say the least. I would compare this to an operatic comic book of sorts.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

2/23/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driving News for February 22, 2011

Todd Miler who shares office space with me handles OWI cases in central Iowa. His availability to me has allowed me to watch how the law works to handle the criminal defense of these cases. I’ve been handling the PI side of drunken driving cases now for the better part of 30 years and they can be a challenge. The law is somewhat convoluted and patched together from a public policy trying to deter drinking and driving while trying not to compensate those who are drunk and driving. The estate claims and the dependent claims can proceed but with some restrictions. Of course after reading thousands of wrong-way driving news reports from all over the country the risks of drinking and driving are pretty telling. If I can answer your questions give me a call; otherwise here today are the news items for Iowa about OWI, drinking and driving or drunk driving as it’s commonly referred to. Here are some stories for today. Contact information: sdlombardi@aol.com and 515-222-1110.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

2/8/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Drunk Driving News for February 8, 2011

Todd Miler who shares office space with me handles OWI cases in central Iowa. His availability to me has allowed me to watch how the law works to handle the criminal defense of these cases. I’ve been handling the PI side of drunken driving cases now for the better part of 30 years and they can be a challenge. The law is somewhat convoluted and patched together from a public policy trying to deter drinking and driving. Of course after reading thousands of wrong-way driving news reports from all over the country the risks of drinking and driving are pretty telling. If I can answer your questions give me a call; otherwise here today are the news items for Iowa about OWI, drinking and driving or drunk driving as it’s commonly referred to.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

1/21/2011
Steve Lombardi
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Arrested in Texas for OWI while riding a horse.

Can you be arrested in Texas for OWI while riding a horse? Read The Verdict today to find out the answer.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

8/15/2010
Steve Lombardi
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Criminal Law Drunk Driving - What you need to know about our services.

: If you’ve been arrested for drunk driving you need to see an attorney within the first ten days after your arrest. Todd Miler has been representing people arrested for OWI or OMVUI for over 10 years. You need to call him for an immediate appointment.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

3/30/2010
Steve Lombardi
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What makes punching in when you're not working wrong?

It’s fraudulent to take a paycheck for time you did not work. Workers are obligated to work in such a way as to advance the employer’s business interests. You’re hired to work in the employer’s business, to help the employer make a profit so that they can stay in business. The entire workforce for that employer counts on you to do right not just for the employer but for all your fellow workers. You owe honesty to each other as well as to the employer. Stealing time, as you put it, is really about stealing resources or in the end, M-O-N-E-Y. When you cash a pay check based on a false time card it's literally stealing money.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

3/8/2010
Todd Miler
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Iowa OWI law: the exception to the Constitution.

We are coming closer to living in a police state. In an OWI prosecution the police officer is the person that controls all the evidence. The officer decides which evidence to preserve. In many cases evidence of a person’s innocence is not preserved. If the evidence doesn’t help the officer, it often times isn’t kept. The standard excuses are videos are lost, breath samples are not preserved, equipment is broken, or none of the officers remembered to turn on their video recording device. People that appear sober on a video don't help an officer get a conviction. Unfortunately, many judges and juries are allowing this so-called “Barney Fife” exception to the Constitution. In other words, a police officer isn’t held to the same standards of other witnesses at a trial. Fortunately, there are more good cops than bad cops. There are however, bad cops.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

3/8/2010
Steve Lombardi
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In the Jury’s Eyes Why Did This Dram Shop Claim Fail?

Juries do odd things especially in small counties where the local tavern seems to have greater importance as a social meeting place. In this instance in my opinion the jury missed the issue or allowed themselves to be sidetracked with a foolish argument that fails to set a viable community standard for acceptable conduct. After all a drunken state, isn't supposed to be a community standard.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

12/30/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Decision Brings Reality Back to Police Work

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a decision December 28, 2009 in Carl Bryan vs. B. McPherson, Coronado Police Department and City of Coronado, Docket No. 08-55622, San Diego District Court allowing a lawsuit to proceed towards trial on an excessive force claim in violation of 42 U.S.C. section 1983, assault and batter, intentional infliction of emotional distress, a violation of California Civil Code section 52.1 and a failure to train.

Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

10/30/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Is there a difference between sex-ed and pornography in Texas?

A father who forced his children to watch hard-core porn, including group sex can’t be charged under Texas law according to the Randall County District Attorney. The children are and 8 and 9 year-old daughters whose father, divorced from the mother “made them watch adults having group sex and various other acts at his home in Amarillo. The parents of the girls, and their 7-year-old sister, are divorced and share custody.”

Texans do everything big, including making bigger mistakes than who they vote in for Governor. The law allows parents to show “harmful material” to their children. Which this lawyer-prosecutor believes sanctions parents showing porn to their children. Here in Iowa we make a distinction between educational materials and those considered pornography. The one is to educate the other In this instance the facts might lead one to conclude the parent’s actions fit in the prurient interests category. Most

“An appeal to "prurient" interest is an appeal to a morbid, degrading and unhealthy interest in sex, as distinguished from a mere candid interest in sex.”

In most states they look at the goal to be achieved and perhaps this father sees group sex as a way to achieve his goal of sex education. Apparently the mother, who wanted her ex jailed, wasn’t too happy.

Pornography is the depiction of sexual behavior that is intended to arouse sexual excitement in its audience. During the twentieth century, Americans debated whether pornographic material should be legally protected or banned.

So the question remains, what was his intention? So when Texas officials aren't beating up on injured people what else do they do? It appears they've found the Internet...

HOUSTON – March 2009



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

10/1/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Iowa New: Driver charged with homicide by vehicle after crash kills passenger

Metrick Lawan, the driver of the car that crashed on September 21st 2009 killing passenger Heaven Chumos, has been charged with two counts of serious injury by vehicle, OWI, and the most serious charge of homicide by vehicle. He arrived at the Polk County Jail Monday after spending the last week in the hospital recovering from his own injuries related to the crash, his bond has been set at $76,000. Investigators had previously said that they found no skid marks indicating that Mr. Jenkins did not try to brake to avoid crashing.

The report indicates the driver had lost his license hours before the crash occurred.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

9/17/2009
Steve Lombardi
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What’s the difference between legitimate and excessive force?

Follow the link and watch this video from South Bend, Indiana and ask yourself if the suspect is resisting arrest and is the force necessary.

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Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

8/26/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Meet the Police Women of Broward County on TLC.

Meet the latest reality series on of all things, The Learning Channel: Meet the Police Women of Broward County, on the TLC. And what is it exactly that TLC is teaching today? Well let’s just take a look and see.

http://tlc.discovery.com/videos/police-women-of-broward-county-meet-andrea.html

Yes you heard it right, the police bragging that, “There’s always a good time to use a Taser.” Right from the mouth of the people entrusted to uphold the law is bravado about turning, what should be a department issued deadly weapon, into a sound bite for entertainment consumption. Is this right? Is this what American society has become? Is this what are tax dollars are being used to do; to put weapons in the hands of law enforcement who think Tasing citizens has entertainment value? This clearly demonstrates what is wrong when the government gets into the entertainment business.

How about instead of playing to the TLC camera that government does what it is constitutionally empowered to do: simply enforce the laws.

This comment by law enforcement is inappropriate, unprofessional and can be later used to show malice by the Broward County Police Department and officers when someone dies from using a Taser. And who will pay for this indiscretion? You guessed it the taxpayers will be paying. The taxpayers of Broward County will be paying for it in wrongful death damages after little Miss Blonde Deputy Gun Slinger gets her fill of always having a good time to use the Taser.

It’s my opinion that government law enforcement participating in reality TV shows is not an appropriate governmental function. These shows started as educational opportunities and they’ve turned away from education to focusing on entertainment. When did police work turn into the latest reality TV series? When cops turn into movie stars crime turns into an excuse for profit and what crime drives the best ad dollars.  Making police work entertaining borders on an unconstitutional exercise of the State of Florida’s police power.  A basic function of state government is law enforcement not entertainment. So using government law enforcement resources to entertain the public is wasting those resources and encouraging the perception that the purpose of law enforcement is to take economic, social and financial advantage of criminal activity.

This is disgraceful for the State of Florida and especially its police departments. This officer should be sanctioned and either removed from the show or from the service of police work. The Broward County Sheriff’s Department needs to withdraw from the TLC.

Does the TLC stand for Taser Loving Cops.

Perhaps next we’ll have a Tase booth at the Iowa State Fair. “Step right up ladies and gentlemen and try your hand at Tasing the Moving Criminal! It’s great fun and even helps reduce the deficit created by irresponsible government spending! Hit the felon twice and we’ll credit your property tax bill! Kill him and we’ll give you a full year of property tax relief! Come one come all!”

This disgusts me; this officer needs to be retrained by the Iowa State Troopers who by the way don’t carry Tasers. They use what is called verbal judo, what the rest of us know to be communication skills.  Notice the Iowa State Patrol’s motto: “To preserve lives, rights & property through courtesy, service & protection.” No boasting, no bravado and certainly not stated for entertainment value. The Iowa State Troopers make the Broward County Sheriff’s Department look like Communist thugs.

America is ill. The American public is being dumbed down and law enforcement is not doing it's job in a respectable way. The three branches of government should be ashamed. As a lawyer statements like the one here make me wonder if we've developed very far beyond the Roman Empire and its use of lions eating slaves for entertainment. Long live Caesar.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

Labels: iowa Taser TLC
8/21/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Drunken Driving it's a tough lesson to learn

On August 9th 2009 Brenda Gregory was hit by an alleged drunk driver as she turned left onto 190th Avenue from Iowa Highway 17. Adam E. Vanous ran the stop sign and struck her car injuring Mrs. Gregory and two other passengers in her car; Anna Tilley and Nick Vandarwarka. Mr. Vanous who is 26 is well passed the stage of, “just being a kid” and this is just another example of a pointless accident that could have easily ended 3 lives.  The law allows a claim for punitive damages against a driver that drives while drunk. The bad news is most auto insurance policies exclude coverage for punitive damages. That means you can get the judgment but it won’t be paid by insurance. Ouch! It’s a tough lesson to learn.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

8/9/2009
Steve Lombardi
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Drunken Driving - Iowa Judge, police officer and others involved with OWI

It’s reported that a former associate judge in Muscatine County, Iowa was ordered to serve five years in prison for his third OWI offense.  He was fined $3,125 and will serve his time at Davenport’s work release center. His BAC was more than twice the limit.

Meanwhile a Burlington, Iowa man was sentenced to 5-years of probation for being the driver of a car that crashed killing the passenger. His BAC was more than twice the limit.

A Waterloo, Iowa police officer was arrested on a drunken driver charge after the Black Hawk County sheriff’s deputies responded to a car in the ditch. No breath or field sobriety test results were available. No indication in the available news stories that anyone was injured.

Coralville, Iowa police charged a Chicago man driving a U-Haul truck was stopped on I-80 with blood-alcohol content at 0.184, more than twice the legal limit. Children were in the vehicle and as reported charges of child endangerment are pending.

Driving drunk or under the influence has serious consequences as we’ve seen this past week with the Taconic Highway wrong-way driving accidents that I’ve been reporting on.

MADD, Mothers Against Drunk Driving have MADD statistics on their website including the link to the NHTSA’s statistics for 2007 Traffic Safety Annual Assessment – Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities.

Summary

In 2007, an estimated 12,998 people were killed in alcohol-impaired driving crashes. – a decline of 3.7 percent from the 13,491 fatalities in 2006.

The fatality rate, per 100 million vehicle miles of travel (VMT), decreased to 0.43 – the lowest on record.

Thirty-two States had decreases in the number of alcohol-impaired driving fatalities in 2007, as compared to 2006.

Twenty-five States and the District of Columbia had increases in the number of alcohol-impaired motor-cycle riders (operators).

Alcohol-impaired motorcycle riders increased by 10 percent in 2007

Since 1982 there has been a steady decline in the number of deaths per vehicle miles traveled. The death rate has gone from a high of just over 1.20 to a low of about 0.50. That’s a good thing. We are moving in the right direction.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

6/23/2009
Todd Miler
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OWI: Iowa Corn Indy 250 Fans

The Iowa Speedway has been an economic boom for the City of Newton, Iowa.  And here comes the Iowa Corn Indy 250 which will be the boom for the local law enforcement to fill their annual budget.  This means arrests for anyone seen in public who resembles a drinker of alcohol.  Fines will be levied and assessments made for "room and board" for jail sentences.  I expect the arrests will largely be for OWI, which is also known as DUI or drunk driving, interference with official acts, assault on a peace officer, and public intoxication.  Even if you haven't been drinking, officers' reports will indicate a strong smell of alcohol, bloodshot watery eyes and slurred speech- only the names will be changed.  In my experience with these types of events, local law enforcement will have virtually all hands on duty.  Most officers will not have the time or the temperament to properly handle each case, which means that some steps in proper protocol will be overlooked.  To a lawyer, this means that constitutional rights will be violated.
 
The City of
Newton sits on an interstate, I-80.  There are other highways; such has State Highway 14 that leads to Newton.  There will be city police officers, county sheriff's deputies, and state troopers all over.  They won't be concerned about Helio Castroneves, Danica Patrick or Dan Wheldon.  They will have their own competition of sorts on arrests.
 
Any guest visiting our state should know that if arrested you do have a right to call a lawyer or family member in order to secure a lawyer once you arrive at the jail in order to protect your rights.  Otherwise, be responsible and enjoy yourself.  Maybe you'll even get to have a Budweiser in the parking lot.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

6/22/2009
Steve Lombardi
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How do the police measure the level of alcohol in your body? ?

What are the different ways that blood alcohol concentration can be measured?  Most of the time the officer is going to request that you provide a breath sample, but they may also request blood or urine.  There are two different times that an officer may request a breath sample.  First, the officer has a hand-held device that can take a breath sample and provide an analysis of blood alcohol content.  The problem is that by law this device is not reliable so they will always request that you provide another breath sample at the police station on another machine which is considered to be more reliable than the hand-held device.  Don’t be fooled- this device also has problems.  Even if a person where to provide a sample each of their breath, blood and urine, all three would have a different alcohol level.  There are many factors to determining the level of blood alcohol concentration and the time of vehicle operation.  Some states do not allow alcohol measurement through urine because it is so unreliable.  In order to obtain more convictions regardless of the reliability of this test, Iowa still allows urine testing.  You always have the right to make a reasonable number of phone calls prior to making a decision on whether to provide a sample for testing.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

5/22/2009
Todd Miler
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OWI: How do you maintain your silence when they are asking you questions??

An officer has to honor your request to talk to a lawyer and to remain silent.  That is your constitutional right.  You have the right under the 5th Amendment to not be a witness against yourself, and you have the right under the 6th Amendment to the assistance of counsel.  Be prepared however since the officer is not going to take your silence as a friendly gesture.  Some officers view silence as an admission of guilt.  Many officers view the constitution as an obstruction to justice and some have the view that the “end justifies the means.”  Those officers do not care if you’re constitutional rights are violated.  They do not like it when people do not respect their authority and refuse to answer their questions.  They threaten to file additional charges, such as Interference with Official Acts for refusing to answer their questions.  Even if you do not answer their questions and do not take their “tests”, they will still charge you with OWI.  If you have decided, either on your own or through the advice of an attorney, to remain silent then you need to stick to your guns.  If you initially decide to remain silent, which then draws the officer’s anger, and you decide to talk about your charge, you are then in the worst situation which is making statements about your charge in additional to having an angry cop.  Most officers will honor your request and fill out their paperwork as long as you sit quietly.  If you do initially indicate that you are going to remain silent, you can not decide to ask questions and expect the officer to talk to you.  All of your questions should go to your lawyer, not the officer.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

5/21/2009
Todd Miler
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OWI: Why does the officer ask if I've been drinking?

Under Iowa’s OWI law, there are strict requirements that must be met for an officer to eventually charge someone with OWI. There are essentially three stages and before an officer moves from one stage to the next, he must satisfy certain requirements within each stage. To move from one stage to the next, an officer has to have evidence that he is trying to obtain which allows him to proceed on. Most of the evidence is founded upon a determination of reasonable grounds to believe someone is drinking and driving. Keep in mind that it is not illegal to drink and drive. It is illegal to drink and drive drunk. But the law says that any admission that you have been drinking allows the officer to move on to the next stage, in other words he can advance towards an arrest. Some officers, and some people in general, believe that any alcohol consumption should result in an OWI. An officer can ask if you’ve been drinking as soon as he pulls you over, even if he doesn’t smell alcohol or have any other basis for suspecting a drunk driver. When a person admits they have had a drink, they are then going to be subjected to field sobriety testing, and those "tests" are designed for you to fail.

So what is the lesson to be learned and why should you listen to this advice?

The lesson is that there are no casual conversations with a police officer. It's like you hear on television, everything you say can and will be used against you.



Category: Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving



Welcome to the Lombardi Law Firm website. Knowing your rights and how to protect yourself is important. Always be alert to risks that can cause you injury or get you killed.  Steve Lombardi provides commentary and insight on this blog, The Verdict and also writes for the Iowa Edict and on occasion on the Des Moines Register web site. Steve Lombardi has more than 30 years in civil litigation including death and injury cases for workers and their spouses for all types of accidents and injuries. Attorney Steve Lombardi is a personal injury lawyer. Join us in making the world a safer place. (515-222-1110 or sdlombardi@aol.com )
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Civil damage lawsuits and criminal law deaths, OWI and drunk driving

Do I have to be present during settlement? Do I have to be with my lawyer when a settlement is made for my personal injury claim? I really do not want to face my neighbors right now. My son was bitten by their dog and they claim that it was my son's fault. I want my solicitor to stick to the amount that I want them to pay me. Can my solicitor make the settlement in my behalf?

Can we sue someone who hit us after a DUI? My pregnant wife was driving the car and a drunk driver hit us and ruined the car. Cops came and gave the guy a DUI. No injuries but I am wondering, am I obligated to a claim because now she is scared to drive or be inside a car.

What can I do if I am caught driving without a license again? I was in an accident; I do not have a license. Took a chance to get back and work. I have been caught before and this will make it my third felony driving while suspended. The ticket written was only for not providing a license, what can I do?

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