New Jersey Drunk Driving News: Sales of DWI Sobriety Checkpoint Apps for Smart Phones Rise

As the saying goes, knowledge is power; and apparently owners of smart phones are feeling more powerful every day. In the news of late are stories about the sales of software applications that allow users of iPhones, BlackBerries and Droids, among others, to keep track of drunken driving checkpoints, also known as sobriety roadblocks. Numerous government officials and police departments have been pressing Apple and Google to stop offering the apps, but this may be in itself be accelerating sales of the DWI alert software packages.

As New Jersey drunken driving defense lawyers, I and my team of experienced DWI attorneys are quick to advise people not to drink and drive. However, we understand that many motorists who are stopped by state and municipal police patrols don’t necessarily realize that they may be legally drunk, something which could end up costing them a great deal.

When a driver is pulled over at a drunk driving checkpoint, if a police officer detects signs of alcohol use he may request the driver to perform a variety of field sobriety tests. Once satisfied that the motorist is likely impaired by alcohol, the officer may also ask the driver to submit to a breathalyzer test. If his or her blood-alcohol content (BAC) measurement is 0.08 or above, the individual could be arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated. This is the beginning of a costly process that may lead to loss of the person’s job, alienation from family and friends, and possibly jail time under certain circumstances.

One way in which motorists are trying to avoid running into a sobriety roadblock is through the use of those DWI and DUI apps. According to news reports, these downloadable applications actually enable smart phone owners to pinpoint the locations of drunk driving checkpoints set from time to time up by police departments all across the Garden State.

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