First-Offense DWI Defense Attorney
A first DWI in Missouri is a Class B misdemeanor — but the consequences go far beyond the courtroom. License suspension, points on your record, skyrocketing insurance rates, and a criminal record that follows you for years. The good news: first-offense DWI cases are among the most defensible charges in Missouri criminal law.
Book a Free Consultation Or call now — 816-451-0909First-Offense DWI in Missouri
Under RSMo §577.010, it is a crime to operate a motor vehicle while in an intoxicated condition — meaning your blood alcohol content (BAC) is .08% or above, or your ability to drive is impaired by alcohol, drugs, or a combination. A first DWI offense in Missouri with no prior alcohol-related enforcement contacts is classified as a Class B misdemeanor.
While a Class B misdemeanor may sound minor, the real impact of a first DWI is felt in the collateral consequences — license suspension, points, SR-22 insurance requirements, and a criminal record that shows up on every background check. Fighting the charge or negotiating a favorable outcome can make an enormous difference in how this affects your life going forward.
Penalties for First-Offense DWI
Criminal Penalties
- Class B Misdemeanor: Up to 6 months in jail and up to $1,000 fine.
- Probation: Most first-time offenders receive probation rather than jail time — but probation comes with conditions including alcohol education, community service, and compliance monitoring.
- Substance Abuse Traffic Offender Program (SATOP): Required for most first-time DWI offenders. Completion is necessary to reinstate your driver's license.
License Consequences
- Administrative suspension — 90 days: If you fail a breath test (.08% or above), the Missouri Department of Revenue suspends your license for 90 days. This is separate from the criminal case and happens automatically unless you request an administrative hearing within 15 days of your arrest.
- 30-day hard suspension: During the first 30 days of the 90-day suspension, you cannot drive at all — no exceptions.
- 60-day restricted driving privilege (RDP): After the 30-day hard suspension, you may be eligible for a restricted license allowing driving to work, school, medical appointments, and alcohol treatment.
- Points: A DWI conviction adds 8 points to your driving record — enough to trigger additional license action by the Department of Revenue.
- SR-22 insurance: Required for several years after a DWI conviction. SR-22 insurance is significantly more expensive than standard coverage.
The Two Separate Cases You're Facing
Most people don't realize that a DWI arrest creates two separate proceedings — and you need to respond to both:
Criminal Case vs. Administrative Case
- Criminal case: Filed by the prosecutor in circuit or municipal court. This is the DWI charge itself — the one that results in a criminal conviction if you plead guilty or are found guilty at trial.
- Administrative case: Filed by the Missouri Department of Revenue. This is the license suspension proceeding. You have only 15 days from the date of your arrest to request an administrative hearing — if you miss that deadline, the suspension takes effect automatically.
These two cases proceed independently. You can win the criminal case and still lose your license through the administrative proceeding — or vice versa. Fighting both simultaneously is essential, and the 15-day deadline for the administrative hearing request makes it urgent to contact an attorney immediately after your arrest.
Common Scenarios That Lead to First-Offense DWI
How These Cases Typically Start
- Traffic violation stop: You're pulled over for speeding, swerving, a lane change violation, or an equipment violation. The officer smells alcohol, observes bloodshot eyes, or notices slurred speech and initiates a DWI investigation.
- DWI checkpoint: You're stopped at a sobriety checkpoint. Officers look for signs of impairment and request field sobriety tests or a breath test if they suspect intoxication.
- Accident investigation: You're involved in a car accident and responding officers suspect alcohol involvement. Even a minor fender-bender can escalate to a DWI investigation.
- Anonymous tip: Someone calls 911 to report an impaired driver and provides your vehicle description and location. Officers locate your vehicle and initiate a stop.
- Parked or sleeping in a vehicle: Missouri's DWI statute covers "operating" a motor vehicle — and courts have interpreted this broadly. Being in the driver's seat with the keys accessible, even if the car is parked and the engine is off, can be charged as DWI.
Defense Strategies for First-Offense DWI
First-offense DWI cases are highly defensible. The government must prove every step of the process was done correctly — and there are multiple points where the case can break down:
Challenging the Traffic Stop
The officer must have had reasonable suspicion to pull you over. If the stop was based on a hunch, a profile, or a minor driving behavior that doesn't actually constitute a traffic violation, everything that follows — the investigation, the field tests, the breath test — can be suppressed.
Challenging the Field Sobriety Tests
Standardized field sobriety tests (walk-and-turn, one-leg stand, horizontal gaze nystagmus) must be administered according to NHTSA protocols. If the officer didn't follow the correct procedures, administered the tests on uneven ground, or failed to account for medical conditions, the results may be unreliable and inadmissible.
Challenging the Breath or Blood Test
Breathalyzer machines must be properly calibrated, maintained, and operated by certified technicians. We challenge the machine's maintenance records, the operator's certification, the observation period before the test, and whether the testing protocol was followed. A faulty breath test is the most common basis for DWI dismissals.
Challenging Probable Cause for Arrest
The officer must have had probable cause to believe you were intoxicated before placing you under arrest. If the totality of the evidence — driving behavior, field tests, observations — doesn't add up to probable cause, the arrest itself may be unlawful, and the breath or blood test that followed is suppressible.
Negotiating a Reduction
In some first-offense cases, the best outcome is negotiating a reduction to a lesser charge — such as careless and imprudent driving — that avoids the DWI conviction and its license consequences. Whether this is achievable depends on the BAC level, the facts of the case, and the jurisdiction.
Fighting the Administrative License Suspension
The 15-day window to request an administrative hearing is your chance to challenge the license suspension independently of the criminal case. We file the hearing request, represent you at the Department of Revenue hearing, and fight to preserve your driving privileges. See our license suspension page for details.
Frequently Asked Questions About First-Offense DWI
Charged with Your First DWI?
The 15-day license deadline starts now. Call The Hartley Law Firm today for a free consultation — before the window closes.
Book Your Free Consultation Or call now — 816-451-0909