OUI / DWI Defense
Charged with OUI in Massachusetts?
An OUI conviction can cost you your license, your insurance rates, and your record. Attorney Reinhardt has defended these cases for three decades — including the science and procedure that make them winnable.
What's at stake
In Massachusetts, driving under the influence is charged as OUI (Operating Under the Influence) — of alcohol or of drugs. Even a first offense is a criminal charge that carries a potential jail sentence, fines, and a license loss through the Registry of Motor Vehicles.
Penalties escalate sharply with each offense. A first offense can mean up to 2½ years in the house of correction, fines, and a license suspension, though many first offenses resolve through the 24D disposition (probation, a fine, and an alcohol-education program) with a shorter suspension. Second, third, and fourth offenses carry mandatory minimum jail time, multi-year and lifetime license consequences, and felony exposure.
Failed a breath test between 2011 and 2019? Widespread problems with the Commonwealth's breathalyzer machines and the state's Office of Alcohol Testing led to thousands of breath results being excluded. If your case involved a breath test in that window, you may be entitled to a new trial or other relief. It is worth having the case reviewed.
How it works
How we defend an OUI
Every OUI is built on evidence that can be challenged — the stop, the field sobriety tests, and the breath or blood evidence.
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Step 1
Review the stop and the evidence
We obtain the police report, booking video, and breath-test records, and examine whether the officer had a lawful reason to stop and detain you.
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Step 2
Attack the tests
Field sobriety tests are subjective and often improperly administered. Breath machines require strict calibration and certification. We scrutinize every step.
- Was the stop supported by reasonable suspicion?
- Were field sobriety tests administered and scored correctly?
- Was the breath machine certified and the operator trained?
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Step 3
Litigate motions to suppress
Where the stop, the arrest, or the testing was improper, we move to suppress the evidence — which can end the case.
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Step 4
Negotiate or try the case
We pursue the best available disposition — including a 24D program on a first offense — or take the case to trial when that's the right call.
OUI questions
Should I have refused the breathalyzer?
Will I lose my license?
What is a 24D disposition?
My case involved a breath test from 2011–2019 — does that matter?
Facing an OUI? Get ahead of it.
The RMV clock and the court clock both start fast. Call for a free, confidential consultation.