Our Newport Beach Office is located at:
Law Offices of David S. Chesley, Inc.
Newport Beach Criminal Defense Attorneys and DUI Lawyers
2801 West Coast Hwy, Suite 270
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(949) 891-0102
DUI Lawyers in Newport Beach, CA
Accused of operating a vehicle under suspicion of drugs or alcohol? Our DUI lawyers in Newport Beach, CA, are here to help. At the Law Offices of David S. Chesley, we focus on reducing charges, negotiating settlements, or wiping your record clean. Contact our Newport Beach, CA, lawyers online or give us a call at (949) 891-0102 for legal representation you can count on.
Below, you will learn more about:
- What (not) to do if you are pulled over for a suspected DUI.
- The different types of DUIs and penalties in California.
- Steps for reducing charges or even getting a DUI expunged.
- How our Newport Beach, CA, DUI lawyers can represent your case.
95% of our DUI clients avoid jail. We move fast on bail, protect your license, push for reductions, and take cases to trial when that’s the best path to a “not guilty” verdict or full dismissal.
What to Do (and Not Do) After a DUI Stop or Arrest in Newport Beach, CA
Getting pulled over or arrested for DUI in California can be overwhelming. What you do in the first few minutes matters. A smart response preserves defenses, limits damage, and gives your Newport Beach, CA, DUI lawyer more to work with to reduce penalties or pursue dismissal.
Below are practical steps to take—and mistakes to avoid—right away:
What to Do
- Stay polite and brief: Hand over license, registration, and insurance. Keep answers minimal or invoke your right to remain silent.
- Note the details: Time, location, lane position, weather, and the officer’s stated reason for the stop.
- Use your rights: Ask for a lawyer and stop answering questions about drinking, medications you take, or travel plans.
- Decide on roadside tests: Adults 21+ not on DUI probation can decline field sobriety tests and the handheld PAS (preliminary alcohol screening) before arrest.
- After arrest, choose a chemical test: California’s implied-consent law requires a breath or blood test after a lawful arrest; refusal brings longer license suspensions and added court penalties.
- Protect your license fast: You typically have 10 days to request a DMV hearing. We can file the request and subpoena records.
- Call a DUI lawyer early: Early intervention can affect charges, release terms, and IID options. Contact us.
You or your Newport Beach, CA, DUI lawyer should request any body cam or dash cam footage that supports your case.
What Not to Do
- Don’t argue or explain: “I only had two” and similar statements end up in the report.
- Don’t volunteer field tests if you can decline: FSTs are subjective and often used to justify arrest.
- Don’t refuse the post-arrest chemical test: Refusal triggers enhanced penalties and longer suspensions.
- Don’t talk about your case: Avoid details on calls, texts, social media, or jail phones.
DUI Stops, Arrests, and What Happens Next
Most DUI cases in Newport Beach start with a traffic stop, saturation patrol, or sobriety checkpoint. Officers must have probable cause to pull you over and must follow strict procedures once they initiate an investigation.
- During the stop: Officers look for driving behavior, odors, and speech patterns to build probable cause. Your rights still apply—keep answers short and polite.
- Roadside testing: Field sobriety and handheld PAS tests are optional for adults 21+ not on DUI probation. Poor performance often reflects nerves or fatigue more than intoxication.
- After arrest: California’s implied-consent law requires a breath or blood test. Refusing increases penalties and triggers longer DMV suspensions.
- Administrative track: You have 10 days to request a DMV hearing to contest license suspension. We can file that request and subpoena body-cam, dash-cam, and calibration records.
Every stage of the process leaves a record that can be challenged. Our Newport Beach DUI lawyers move fast to preserve that evidence and spot procedural errors that can lead to dismissals or reductions.
Collateral Consequences of a DUI
Beyond fines and court dates, a DUI can ripple through licenses, jobs, immigration status, and daily life.
- License & Insurance: Administrative suspensions, SR-22, and higher premiums.
- Employment: CDL holders face career-ending outcomes; many employers act on background checks before a case resolves.
- Immigration & Travel: Certain DUI outcomes affect admissibility and create nationalization/immigration hurdles.
- Probation Terms: Zero-tolerance alcohol conditions, search terms, testing, and program compliance.
Our Newport Beach Criminal Defense Lawyers map these risks early and build a plan that protects your license, work, and future while we fight the case. Contact our DUI lawyers in Newport Beach, CA, now for a free and confidential review of your case.
Newport Beach, CA, DUI Charges & Statutes
California’s DUI laws apply statewide, but outcomes turn on the evidence, prior offenses, and enhancements for minors, commercial drivers, and injuries. Below is a breakdown of DUI-related charges our Newport Beach, CA, DUI lawyers defend:
Core Alcohol DUIs
- DUI Alcohol (§23152(a)) and Per Se 0.08% (§23152(b)): Impairment-based vs. 0.08%+ (prosecutors usually file both).
Drug or Combination DUIs
- DUI Drugs (§23152(f)): Impairment from any drug (Rx, cannabis, controlled).
- Alcohol + Drugs (§23152(g)): Combined impairment from both.
Commercial & For-Hire
- Commercial 0.04% (§23152(d)): Applies to CDL drivers operating commercial vehicles; convictions can be career-ending.
- For-Hire 0.04% (§23152(e)): Rideshare/taxi while carrying a passenger.
Under-21 (Zero Tolerance)
- Admin 0.01% (§23136): DMV action even without a criminal case.
- Per Se 0.05% (§23140): Misdemeanor threshold for drivers under 21.
Injury & Enhancements
- DUI Causing Injury (§23153): Felony-eligible with potential restitution and prison time.
- Child Passenger (§23572): Mandatory jail adds if a child under 14 is present.
- Chemical Test Refusal (§23577): Longer suspensions and added custody for post-arrest refusals.
- Excessive Speed + Reckless Driving (§23582): Mandatory jail at high speeds with reckless driving.
Repeat & Felony
- Fourth DUI in 10 Years (§23550): Typically a felony with state prison exposure.
- Prior Felony DUI (§23550.5): Felony penalties with a prior felony DUI.
- DUI Probation Terms (§23154): 0.01%+ limits and testing while on DUI probation.
Related / Procedural
- “Wet Reckless” (§23103.5): A negotiated reduction from DUI that still counts as a prior in future DUI cases.
- Reckless Driving (§23103) and Exhibition of Speed (§23109): Sometimes filed with—or offered instead of—DUI in negotiated resolutions.
- Implied Consent (§23612): Governs post-arrest breath or blood testing and refusal consequences.
- Open Container (§23221–§23229): Open container/possession offenses often accompany DUI stops or checkpoints.
- Driving Without Required IID (§23247): Operating without a required ignition interlock device (IID) adds new criminal exposure and license consequences.
If you’re unsure which statute fits your case, we can pinpoint it, map your exposure, and move fast on the DMV and court tracks so your defense starts on solid ground. Contact our DUI lawyers in Newport Beach, CA, to get answers now.
Plea Options, Diversion, & Alternative Sentencing in Newport Beach, CA, DUI Cases
Going to trial isn’t the only path through a DUI case, but you still want the case trial-ready so you negotiate from a position of strength.
Our goal as Newport Beach, CA, DUI lawyers is to help you:
- Reduce or avoid jail time through dismissals, charge reductions, or structured alternatives.
- Protect your license by challenging administrative suspensions and using IID programs strategically.
- Limit long-term fallout by containing insurance spikes, employment issues, and background-check problems.
- Position your case for dismissal or acquittal by building leverage early and keeping trial on the table.
Our DUI lawyers in Newport Beach, CA, work to get the best result for your situation with focused pre- and post-trial efforts. In practice, most cases move along one of three paths:
1) Charge Reductions
- Wet Reckless, dry reckless, or exhibition of speed to trim license exposure and custody time.
- Fact Leverage: Borderline BACs, rising-BAC timing, Title 17 compliance issues, checkpoint defects, and video gaps open doors.
2) Diversion, Treatment & IID Options
- Orange County DUI Court: For eligible repeat, non-violent defendants—treatment, testing, and judicial oversight in place of long jail terms.
- IID-Driven Sentences: Keep driving legally with an IID while you complete classes and probation; clean filings prevent avoidable suspensions.
- Targeted Counseling/Monitoring: Alcohol and drug programs, SCRAM/continuous monitoring, and compliance plans that move numbers at the table.
3) Custody Alternatives & Trial-Ready Negotiation
- Work Release & Private Programs: To help convert days to verified work or structured custody when appropriate.
- Scheduling Flexibility: Staggered days and report dates to protect employment and childcare.
- Trial Posture: Subpoena records, lock in witnesses, keep suppression issues live—then take the deal only if it serves your goals.
We line up the strongest reduction or alternative first—and if the offer doesn’t match your goals, we take the case to a jury and push for “not guilty.”
DUI Expungement & Driver Record Relief in Newport Beach, CA
Most DUI misdemeanors can be dismissed under PC §1203.4 after you complete probation. An expungement updates the court record to show a dismissal and helps with most private-sector background checks, but it isn’t a true “erase” and it doesn’t undo DMV actions on its own.
Eligibility usually requires finishing probation, paying fines and restitution, and having no new cases pending. A felony DUI that’s eligible for reduction can sometimes be reduced to a misdemeanor first and then dismissed. If charges were never filed—or you were acquitted—we can pursue arrest record sealing instead of expungement.
Driver record relief is separate from court relief. A §1203.4 dismissal won’t remove DMV points, shorten the 10-year DUI lookback, or reverse an administrative suspension by itself, though IID and SR-22 issues can phase out over time. Certain professional licenses and government applications can still require disclosure even after dismissal. We’ll confirm what’s possible for your court record and your DMV history, time the filings, and handle the paperwork end-to-end so you can move forward with fewer barriers.
Felony DUI Expungement Options
Felony expungement is possible only when the case ended in probation (no state prison). Many “wobbler” injury DUIs can be reduced under PC §17(b) and then dismissed under §1203.4. If reduction or dismissal isn’t available, we evaluate a Certificate of Rehabilitation and, in rare cases, a gubernatorial pardon.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens to my license after a DUI arrest?
The officer issues a temporary license and forwards a suspension to the DMV. You generally have 10 days to request a hearing. Win the hearing and your license stays valid pending court; lose it and you may be eligible to drive with an IID, depending on the case.
Can I refuse the breath or blood test?
Before arrest, adults can usually decline the handheld PAS (preliminary alcohol screening). After a lawful arrest, California’s implied-consent law requires a breath or blood test; refusal brings longer suspensions and added court penalties. Under-21 or DUI-probation drivers face stricter rules.
Do I have to do field sobriety tests?
No. Adults 21+ not on DUI probation can decline field sobriety tests. Officers often use them to justify arrest, and they’re subjective.
Should I choose breath or blood after arrest?
Both satisfy implied consent. Breath gives a quick number; blood preserves a sample for independent testing. The better choice depends on your facts—ask counsel as soon as you can.
Is a DUI a misdemeanor or a felony?
Most first, second, and third DUIs are misdemeanors. A fourth within 10 years, a prior felony DUI, DUI causing injury, or death cases can be charged as felonies (including manslaughter or “Watson” murder in specific circumstances).
Will I need an ignition interlock device (IID)?
California’s IID framework lets many drivers keep driving during a suspension. Length depends on the offense and whether anyone was injured. Correct installation and compliance matter.
How long will a DUI stay on my record?
DUIs count as priors for 10 years for sentencing. Insurance and background impacts vary. Some convictions can be dismissed under PC §1203.4 after probation, which helps with most private-sector checks.
What if I miss the 10-day DMV deadline?
You risk an automatic suspension. You may still have options (including IID), but act fast—call a DUI lawyer to assess immediate next steps.
Can you get a DUI reduced to a “wet reckless”?
Sometimes. Prosecutors may offer a reduction based on the evidence, priors, and BAC. A wet reckless still counts as a prior in future DUI cases.
How soon should I hire a lawyer?
Immediately. Early work preserves video, locks down timelines, and gets the DMV hearing on the calendar before the window closes.
Why Hire the Law Offices of David S. Chesley for a Newport Beach DUI?
When a DUI puts your license, job, and record at risk, you need a legal team in Orange County that moves fast in court and at the DMV.
Let’s protect your license and your future. Contact our Newport Beach office or call (949) 891-0102 for a confidential consultation with our DUI lawyers in Newport Beach, CA.










































