CDL OWI Defense Michigan | Your Career is On the Line
First OWI = 1-year CDL suspension. Second OWI = LIFETIME ban. No restricted CDL. You need experienced, aggressive defense NOW.
If you're a Commercial Driver's License (CDL) holder arrested for OWI, you're not just facing criminal penalties—you're facing the end of your career. Federal law mandates a 1-year CDL suspension for your first offense and a lifetime disqualification for your second. There is NO restricted CDL—you cannot drive commercially AT ALL during your suspension. Whether you were driving your personal vehicle or a commercial truck, the consequences are the same. You need an attorney who understands CDL-specific federal regulations and knows how to fight for your livelihood.
CDL Penalties for OWI: Federal Law vs. Michigan Law
CDL holders face two separate sets of penalties: Michigan criminal penalties (jail, fines, probation) PLUS federal commercial driver disqualification. Here's what you're really facing:
Federal CDL Disqualification (49 CFR Part 383)
Federal law governs CDL suspensions nationwide. These penalties apply even if you were driving your personal vehicle:
| Offense | BAC Level | CDL Suspension | Restricted CDL? |
|---|---|---|---|
| First OWI (Personal Vehicle) | 0.08% or higher | 1 year | NO |
| First OWI (Commercial Vehicle) | 0.04% or higher | 1 year | NO |
| First OWI with Hazmat Endorsement | 0.04% or higher | 3 years | NO |
| Second OWI (Lifetime) | Any BAC | LIFETIME | NO |
| Refusal to Test (First) | N/A | 1 year | NO |
| Refusal to Test (Second) | N/A | LIFETIME | NO |
Critical Point: The federal CDL suspension is in addition to your Michigan driver's license suspension. Even if you get a restricted Michigan license for personal driving, you CANNOT drive commercially.
Lower BAC Threshold for CDL Holders
CDL holders face stricter BAC limits:
- 0.04% BAC in commercial vehicle: Federal OWI violation (half the 0.08% limit for regular drivers)
- 0.08% BAC in personal vehicle: Standard OWI under Michigan law
- Any detectable alcohol in commercial vehicle: 24-hour out-of-service order
This means you can be over the legal limit for CDL purposes while still under the limit for non-commercial drivers.
It Doesn't Matter What Vehicle You Were Driving
This is the most common misunderstanding among CDL holders: "I was driving my personal car, not my truck, so my CDL is safe."
FALSE.
Federal law mandates CDL disqualification for ANY alcohol-related driving offense, regardless of what vehicle you were operating at the time. It doesn't matter if you were:
- Driving your personal car on your day off
- Driving your spouse's vehicle
- Driving a rental car on vacation
- Driving a motorcycle
- Driving an ATV or snowmobile
If you hold a CDL and you're convicted of OWI in ANY vehicle, you lose your CDL for at least 1 year.
Real-World Example
You're a truck driver with 15 years of experience. On a Saturday night, you drive your personal pickup truck to a friend's house for dinner. You have three beers over the course of the evening. On the way home, you're pulled over for a broken taillight. The officer smells alcohol, administers field sobriety tests, and arrests you for OWI. Your BAC is 0.09%.
Result: Even though you were not driving a commercial vehicle and were not on the job, you face a 1-year CDL suspension. You cannot drive trucks, buses, or any commercial vehicle during that year. For most professional drivers, this means 12 months without income.
Your Career is at Risk—Not Just Your License. This is why experienced CDL OWI defense is essential.
Financial Devastation: The True Cost for CDL Holders
A CDL OWI conviction isn't just about fines and jail time—it's about losing 12 months of income and potentially your entire career.
Lost Income for 1-Year Suspension
Average commercial driver salary in Michigan: $50,000 to $70,000 per year
- Lost wages (1 year): $50,000 - $70,000
- Lost benefits: Health insurance, retirement contributions, per diem
- Gap in employment: Makes it harder to find work after reinstatement
Additional Costs
- Court fines and fees: $1,500 - $2,500
- Attorney fees: $3,000 - $10,000 (but essential to avoid conviction)
- Increased insurance: $3,000 - $8,000 over 3-5 years
- Substance abuse programs: $500 - $2,000
- License reinstatement: $125 - $200
- CDL retraining/recertification: $1,000 - $5,000 (if you can get rehired)
Total Financial Impact: $60,000 to $100,000+
This doesn't include the long-term career damage. Many trucking companies have zero-tolerance policies and will never rehire a driver with an OWI conviction, even after the suspension ends.
Lifetime Ban = Career Over
A second OWI means a lifetime CDL disqualification. There is NO process for reinstatement after 10 years (unlike some other CDL disqualifications). A second drunk driving offense effectively ends your career as a professional driver.
This is why you need an attorney experienced in CDL defense. The financial stakes are too high to risk a conviction.
Defense Strategies for CDL Holders Facing OWI Charges
When your career is on the line, you need aggressive, experienced defense. Here are the strategies we use to protect CDL holders:
1. Negotiate Reduction to Non-Alcohol Offense
The ONLY way to avoid CDL disqualification is to reduce the charge to a non-alcohol-related offense. This is the most valuable defense strategy for CDL holders.
Target charges:
- Reckless Driving: A traffic misdemeanor that is NOT alcohol-related. Does NOT trigger federal CDL disqualification.
- Careless Driving: Lesser traffic offense without alcohol component
- Improper Lane Use: Civil infraction in some cases
Important: Reducing OWI to OWVI (Operating While Visibly Impaired) does NOT help CDL holders. OWVI is still an alcohol-related offense and still triggers the 1-year CDL suspension. You MUST negotiate to a non-alcohol charge.
2. Challenge the Traffic Stop (Fourth Amendment)
If the police stopped you without reasonable suspicion, all evidence can be suppressed, including your breath test. Without valid evidence, the prosecutor cannot prove their case.
Common illegal stop scenarios:
- Officer claims you were "weaving" but dashcam shows normal driving
- Stop based solely on anonymous tip without corroboration
- Pulling you over for an equipment violation that didn't actually exist
- Checkpoint that doesn't meet constitutional requirements
3. Challenge the Breathalyzer or Blood Test
Breath and blood tests are NOT infallible. We attack the accuracy and admissibility of chemical tests by:
- Subpoenaing calibration records: Breathalyzers must be calibrated regularly. Missed calibrations = unreliable results.
- Challenging operator certification: The officer administering the test must be properly trained and certified.
- Medical conditions: GERD, acid reflux, diabetes, and low-carb diets can cause falsely elevated BAC readings.
- Rising BAC defense: Your BAC may have been below the limit while driving but rose by the time you were tested.
- Mouth alcohol contamination: Burping, vomiting, or mouthwash can cause inflated readings.
4. Challenge Field Sobriety Tests
Field sobriety tests (FSTs) are subjective and unreliable. Factors that affect performance include:
- Medical conditions (knee problems, back injuries, inner ear issues)
- Age (balance tests are difficult for people over 50)
- Footwear (work boots, steel-toed shoes)
- Weather conditions (ice, gravel, uneven pavement)
- Fatigue from long-haul driving
- Officer gave improper instructions
Important for truck drivers: Long hours on the road cause fatigue and balance issues that mimic intoxication. We can present evidence that your FST performance was due to job-related fatigue, not alcohol.
5. Negotiate Deferred Prosecution or Diversion
Some Michigan counties offer pre-trial diversion programs for first-time offenders. If you successfully complete the program (probation, treatment, testing), the charges are dismissed—meaning NO conviction and NO CDL suspension.
Eligibility varies by county and prosecutor. An experienced attorney can advocate for admission to these programs and present your case as appropriate for diversion.
6. Fight for Dismissal Based on Police Errors
We've won CDL OWI cases by proving:
- Police failed to read Miranda rights before custodial interrogation
- Officer lacked probable cause to arrest
- Blood sample was mishandled or improperly stored
- Police report contains factual errors or inconsistencies
- Dashcam or bodycam footage contradicts officer's testimony
Bottom Line: For CDL holders, the ONLY acceptable outcome is dismissal or reduction to a non-alcohol offense. We fight aggressively to protect your career.
What CDL Holders Must Do Immediately After OWI Arrest
Step 1: Hire a CDL-Specific OWI Attorney IMMEDIATELY
You do not have time to wait. You need an attorney who:
- Understands federal CDL regulations (49 CFR Part 383)
- Knows the difference between Michigan criminal penalties and federal CDL disqualification
- Has experience negotiating non-alcohol charge reductions
- Understands the unique defenses available to commercial drivers
Call (616) 227-3303 now for emergency consultation.
Step 2: Request a License Hearing Within 14 Days
When arrested for OWI, you have 14 days to request an administrative hearing with the Michigan Secretary of State to challenge your driver's license suspension.
Call the Michigan Secretary of State at (888) 767-6424 within 14 days to request your hearing. Missing this deadline means automatic suspension.
Note: Winning the administrative hearing may save your regular driver's license, but it does NOT prevent federal CDL disqualification if you're later convicted in criminal court. You still need to fight the criminal charges.
Step 3: Notify Your Employer (You May Be Required To)
Under federal law, CDL holders must notify their employer within 30 days of a conviction for any traffic violation (except parking). However, you are NOT required to report an arrest—only a conviction.
Do NOT voluntarily tell your employer about the arrest until you consult with an attorney. If the charges are dismissed or reduced to a non-alcohol offense, you may not need to report anything.
Step 4: Do NOT Talk to Police Without an Attorney
After your arrest, police may try to question you. Do not answer their questions. Politely invoke your Fifth Amendment right to remain silent:
"I'm invoking my right to remain silent and would like to speak to an attorney."
Anything you say can be used against you—and may cost you your CDL.
Step 5: Document Everything
Write down:
- What you ate and drank (including times)
- When and where you were pulled over
- What the officer said and did
- Any medical conditions or medications
- Weather and road conditions
- How many hours you had been driving that day (fatigue evidence)
Step 6: Avoid Social Media
Do not post about your arrest, discuss the case online, or share photos of yourself at bars or drinking. Prosecutors monitor social media and will use your posts against you.
Why CDL Holders Choose Sorin & Pyle for OWI Defense
We Understand What's at Stake
When you're a professional driver, an OWI isn't just a criminal charge—it's a career-ending threat. We know that you're not just fighting for your freedom; you're fighting to keep your livelihood and support your family.
Former Public Defender Experience
Attorney Sorin Panainte spent years as a public defender handling hundreds of OWI cases. He knows how prosecutors build their cases and how to dismantle them. He's won dismissals and charge reductions for CDL holders facing career-ending convictions.
We Focus on Non-Alcohol Charge Reductions
For CDL holders, reducing OWI to OWVI is NOT good enough. We aggressively negotiate for reckless driving or other non-alcohol offenses that do NOT trigger federal CDL disqualification.
Aggressive Trial Representation
If a favorable plea deal isn't possible, we take your case to trial. We've won OWI trials by challenging breathalyzer accuracy, exposing illegal stops, and proving constitutional violations.
We Don't Judge—We Fight
At Sorin & Pyle, we believe everyone deserves a second chance. We don't care about the circumstances of your arrest—we care about protecting your rights and your career.
Emergency Consultation for CDL Holders
Your CDL and career are on the line. Contact us immediately for a free, confidential consultation. We'll review your case and develop a defense strategy to protect your livelihood.
Frequently Asked Questions: CDL OWI Defense
CDL at Risk? Your Career Depends on Your Next Move
Don't trust your livelihood to a general OWI attorney. You need CDL-focused defense from experienced trial lawyers. Contact Sorin & Pyle immediately for emergency consultation.