DWI & DUI Defense

A Missouri DWI sets
two clocks in motion.

Most people walking out of a Missouri police station after a DWI arrest think they have one problem: the criminal charge. They have two. The criminal case moves at the pace of the docket. The other case — the administrative license suspension — runs on a fifteen-day clock that starts the moment of arrest. Miss it, and the license is gone whether you win the criminal case or not. We work both cases in parallel, the moment you call.

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What We Handle

Both cases. Same lawyer.
From the first 15 days through trial.

Why It Matters Who You Hire

The difference
an experienced lawyer makes.

1

The 15-Day Clock Is the Most Time-Sensitive Fact

The window to request an administrative hearing closes fifteen days from arrest, not from charge. Miss it and the license is gone whether you ever appear in criminal court or not. We file the hearing request the same day we are retained.

2

We Know the Forensic Science

Breath test machines must be calibrated, maintained, and logged. The fifteen-minute observation period before testing must be respected. The chain of custody for blood samples must be unbroken. Where these procedures fail, the evidence can be excluded — sometimes ending the case entirely.

3

A Former Municipal Prosecutor Sees Both Sides

David has served as a Municipal Prosecuting Attorney. He knows how the State builds DWI cases at the municipal level — the pressure to plead, the offers that get made, and the issues that win at trial. He uses that perspective for the defense now.

4

We Try DWI Cases When We Have To

Most DWI cases resolve through negotiation. The ones that should not are tried. Carriers and prosecutors know which firms will try a case — and they make better offers as a result.

The Process

What happens
when you call us.

01

Same-Day Call

Call as soon as possible after arrest. The 15-day administrative deadline starts immediately. The first conversation is free and usually short.

02

Administrative Hearing Request

We file the hearing request with the Missouri Department of Revenue within hours of being retained. Filing stays the license suspension until the hearing is decided.

03

Discovery & Records Subpoenas

We subpoena the breath test maintenance logs, calibration records, dispatch audio, body-cam and dash-cam video, and the officer's training records.

04

Both Cases Worked in Parallel

Negotiation, motion practice, or trial — on whichever case moves first. The strategy on each side informs the strategy on the other.

Common Questions

Frequently asked
questions.

Missouri law gives a driver fifteen calendar days from the date of arrest to request an administrative hearing with the Department of Revenue to challenge the automatic license suspension. If the request is not made within that window, the suspension takes effect on day 16 — regardless of what happens in the criminal case.

It depends on your specific situation. Refusing triggers a one-year license revocation under the Implied Consent law and produces evidence the prosecution will argue at trial. But it also denies the State a per se BAC reading, which can make the criminal case harder to prove. We discuss the trade-offs in our 15-day guide article and in your initial consultation.

Yes, in many cases. Common pretrial outcomes include reduction to "Driving with Excessive Blood Alcohol Content" (a lesser ordinance violation in some courts), reduction to a careless driving charge, Suspended Imposition of Sentence outcomes, and outright dismissals where suppression motions succeed. The earlier we are engaged, the more options remain.

A first-offense DWI with a breath test above 0.08% triggers a 90-day administrative suspension — the first 30 days as hard suspension (no driving), the next 60 days with restricted privileges and an ignition interlock device. A refusal triggers a one-year revocation. Successfully challenging the administrative suspension at hearing prevents either.

Yes. A first DWI conviction triggers a one-year CDL disqualification — even if the DWI was in your personal vehicle while off duty. A second DWI conviction can result in lifetime disqualification. Federal regulations also require employer notification and SAP (Substance Abuse Professional) evaluation. CDL drivers should call counsel immediately.

DWI defense fees depend on the specific charge, whether the case is likely to proceed to trial, and whether expert witnesses are needed. Repeat and felony DWI cases require more work and cost more accordingly. We quote our fee clearly in writing at the initial consultation, which is free.

Schedule a Conversation

The first call costs
nothing.

(314) 831-9350
Most calls returned the same business day
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