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COMMERCIAL
DRIVERS BEWARE: DWI AND OTHER MOTOR VEHICLE CONVICTIONS, AS WELL AS A
REFUSAL TO SUBMIT TO A CHEMICAL TEST, MAY RESULT IN THE REVOCATION OF YOUR
CDL, EVEN IF YOU WERE NOT OPERATING A COMMERCIAL VEHICLE. THE CDL LOSS MAY
BE FOR 60 DAYS TO LIFETIME, DEPENDING ON YOUR MV RECORD.
DWI CONVICTIONS AND REFUSALS
If you
hold a commercial driver license and are convicted of DWI, even though you
were not operating a commercial vehicle at the time, you face a longer
revocation of your CDL license than the Court imposed for your conviction.
If you have no prior DWI convictions, your CDL will be revoked for one year,
or the period of time for which the Court revoked your license, whichever
is longer. A ninety-day revocation for DWI in a non-commercial vehicle,
would result in the loss of your CDL for one year; you would, however, be
entitled to the restoration of your regular, non-commercial license at the
end of the ninety days imposed by the New Hampshire court. If you are
suspended by the New Hampshire Department of Safety for refusing to submit
to a chemical test, even in a non-commercial vehicle, you will lose your
CDL for a period of one year. A second-offense DWI conviction or refusal
will result in a lifetime loss of your CDL. If you have both a DWI and a
refusal arising from two separate incidents, you will lose you Commercial
Driver�s License for life; and, for CDL purposes, DWI convictions and
refusals do not disappear from your record after 10 years, but remain there
forever. Further, I understand from commercial drivers whom I have
represented that, even though a driver with a DWI conviction on his or her
record may have had his CDL restored, it is likely to be difficult to find
or to continue employment as a commercial driver because of onerous
reporting requirements imposed on employers by State and Federal law.
SERIOUS MOTOR VEHICLE VIOLATIONS
Conviction
of serious offenses other than DWI can also result in lengthy CDL suspensions
regardless of whether you were driving a commercial motor vehicle. A single
conviction for leaving the scene of an accident will result in a one-year
suspension of your CDL, even if you receive no suspension of your New
Hampshire operator�s license as a result of the conviction itself. Should
you at that time have on your record a previous DWI, or conduct after an
accident conviction, or a refusal to submit, you face loss of your CDL for
life.
MINOR MOTOR VEHICLE CONVICTIONS
Other
motor vehicle convictions, even for minor offenses, can result in a
revocation of your CDL. If you are convicted of speeding, reckless driving,
illegally changing lanes, following too close, and have as few as two
previous similar offenses within a three-year period, you face the loss of
your CDL for 120 days, even if you were operating a non-commercial vehicle
at the time. Should you receive a license loss for one of the offenses
listed immediately above, and you have one prior conviction for any of
those offenses within the last three years, you will lose your CDL for 60
days.
BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY
The law
on loss of the CDL is complicated and difficult to interpret, as it is
based on a combination of New Hampshire and Federal statutes and
regulations. Since the New Hampshire Department of Safety has not been
administering these CDL suspensions for long, there is little settled law
with regard to matters which are not made clear by the language of those
statutes and regulations. As a result, if you hold a CDL, you should check
with a lawyer familiar with CDL law prior to entering a plea of guilty to
any motor vehicle offense. If you are charged with a DWI, legal
representation legal representation is necessary.
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