The Trade-Off: No Number, Longer Suspension
When you refuse a breathalyzer in Illinois, you face enhanced administrative penalties under the state's implied consent law. Your license is suspended for 12 months instead of 6 months. But here's what police don't tell you: refusing also means the prosecution has no BAC number to use against you in court. No 0.12 or 0.18 to shock the jury. No scientific-looking evidence of impairment.
Refusal cases require a different defense strategy. Without breathalyzer evidence, the State must prove impairment through officer observations, field sobriety tests, and other circumstantial evidence. As former prosecutors, we know how to attack these subjective elements and create reasonable doubt about impairment.
Many refusal cases are actually easier to defend than cases with high BAC numbers. The prosecution's burden of proof doesn't change — they must still prove impairment beyond a reasonable doubt. We've successfully defended numerous refusal cases, often achieving dismissals or favorable plea deals because the State simply can't meet that burden.