When you face a driving while intoxicated charge in Lubbock County, the consequences can affect every aspect of your life; your drivers license, your employment, your freedom, and your future. A DWI conviction carries penalties that extend far beyond fines and jail time. Texas law enforcement and prosecutors pursue these cases aggressively, making skilled dwi legal assistance essential from the moment of arrest through final resolution.
Our firm focuses on criminal defense with particular emphasis on intoxication offenses throughout Lubbock, Texas. We handle cases involving alcohol, controlled substance impairment, cannabis-related DWI charges, prescription drug intoxication, and other complex scenarios where chemical testing, field sobriety tests, and officer observations form the basis of criminal charges. Whether you’re facing a first-time offense or dealing with enhanced penalties due to prior convictions, our approach combines technical knowledge of Texas Penal Code provisions with courtroom experience in Lubbock County courts.
A DWI attorney who understands both the scientific and procedural elements of these cases can identify weaknesses in the state’s evidence, challenge improper testing methods, and present compelling defenses. We examine every detail from the initial traffic stop through blood or breath specimen collection to protect your rights and pursue the most favorable outcome available under the circumstances.

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Our criminal defense attorney practice focuses on the full spectrum of intoxication-related charges prosecuted in Lubbock County and surrounding jurisdictions. We handle misdemeanor and felony DWI cases, administrative license revocation hearings, occupational license applications, and post-conviction relief matters. Each case receives thorough investigation, including review of dash-cam and body-cam footage, calibration records for breath-testing instruments, blood-draw chain-of-custody documentation, and officer training files.
We represent clients charged with standard driving while intoxicated offenses as well as enhanced and specialized intoxication crimes. Our DWI attorney team analyzes the specific facts of your arrest including time of stop, reason for detention, administration of standardized field sobriety tests, compliance with Texas Transportation Code Chapter 724
specimen-request procedures, and accuracy of chemical testing to develop targeted motions to suppress evidence and challenge the State’s proof at trial.
Our Lubbock criminal defense attorney practice also represents clients facing related charges that often accompany DWI arrests, including possession of marijuana, possession of a controlled substance, unlawful carrying of a weapon, open-container violations, and outstanding warrant issues discovered during booking. We coordinate defense strategies across multiple charges to minimize cumulative penalties and protect your record from compounding consequences.
| DWI Service Type | Legal Scope | Key Defense Focus |
|---|---|---|
First-Offense DWI (Misdemeanor) | Class B misdemeanor; Class A if BAC ≥0.15 | Probable cause for stop, SFST validity, breath/blood accuracy |
Second or Subsequent DWI | Class A misdemeanor or third-degree felony | Prior conviction admissibility, enhancement proof, jail alternatives |
DWI with Child Passenger | State jail felony under Texas Penal Code § 49.045 | Presence and age of child, CPS involvement, sentencing mitigation |
Intoxication Assault (Felony) | Third-degree or second-degree felony | Causation, serious bodily injury definition, accident reconstruction |
Intoxication Manslaughter | Second-degree felony | Causation analysis, toxicology disputes, trial defense |
Boating While Intoxicated (BWI) | Class B misdemeanor; enhanced penalties possible | Watercraft operation, officer jurisdiction, field sobriety on water |
CDL DWI Defense | Commercial driver disqualification under federal and state law | Preventing CDL suspension, administrative hearing representation |
Administrative License Revocation (ALR) | Driver license suspension by Texas DPS | Requesting hearing within 15 days, challenging suspension, securing occupational license |
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Texas Penal Code Section 49.04 defines the offense of driving while intoxicated as operating a motor vehicle in a public place while intoxicated. Intoxication means not having the normal use of mental or physical faculties by reason of the introduction of alcohol, a drug, a dangerous drug, a combination of substances, or any other substance into the body, or having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more. This dual definition allows prosecutors to pursue DWI charges based on observed impairment even when breath or blood results fall below the per se limit, or to rely solely on chemical test results regardless of your observed behavior. Texas Penal Code Section 49.09 governs enhanced penalties and elevated offense classifications. A first-offense DWI is typically a Class B misdemeanor, punishable by up to 180 days in jail and a fine up to $2,000. If your blood alcohol concentration measured 0.15 or higher, the charge elevates to a Class A misdemeanor with up to one year in jail and a $4,000 fine. A second DWI becomes a Class A misdemeanor regardless of BAC. A third or subsequent conviction escalates to a third-degree felony, carrying two to ten years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine. Additional enhancements apply when a child passenger under 15 years of age was present in the vehicle, triggering state jail felony charges under Section 49.045, or when the intoxicated driving caused serious bodily injury or death to another person.
| Texas DWI Statute | Legal Standard or Requirement | Impact on Your Case |
|---|---|---|
Texas Penal Code § 49.04 | Defines DWI as operating a motor vehicle in a public place while intoxicated, including loss of normal use or BAC ≥0.08 | Establishes dual basis for prosecution: impairment or per se BAC |
Texas Penal Code § 49.09 | Sets enhanced penalties for repeat offenses and elevated BAC | Prior convictions or BAC ≥0.15 increase classification and punishment range |
Texas Transportation Code Chapter 724 | Governs implied consent, specimen requests, refusal consequences, and ALR procedures | Refusal triggers automatic license suspension; compliance provides breath/blood evidence |
Texas Transportation Code Chapter 724 addresses implied consent and administrative license consequences. By operating a motor vehicle in Texas, you impliedly consent to provide a breath or blood specimen if arrested for DWI. If you refuse testing, your license faces automatic suspension for 180 days for a first refusal or two years for a prior refusal or suspension within ten years. If you provide a specimen and the result shows an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more, your license faces suspension for 90 days for a first offense or one year for a prior suspension. You have only 15 days from the date of arrest to request an administrative license revocation hearing with the Texas Department of Public Safety to contest the suspension and preserve your driving privileges during the court proceedings A DWI conviction in Lubbock can trigger serious financial consequences. In addition to court costs and other penalties, a misdemeanor DWI conviction in Texas can result in total fines and state-imposed assessments ranging from approximately $6,000 to $10,000 or more. A felony DWI conviction can expose you to financial penalties reaching $16,000 or higher, depending on the circumstances of the case, prior convictions, and alcohol concentration levels. Most DWI offenders may be required to install an ignition interlock device on every vehicle they operate, at their own expense, for six months to multiple years. Your auto insurance premiums may increase dramatically or your coverage may be canceled entirely, forcing you into high-risk SR-22 filing. Professional license holders, including nurses, real estate agents, attorneys, teachers, commercial drivers, pilots, and security personnel, face disciplinary proceedings and possible suspension or revocation of credentials following a DWI conviction. Employers conducting background checks will discover the criminal record, affecting hiring decisions, promotions, and job retention. Immigration consequences can include denial of naturalization, inadmissibility findings, and removal proceedings for non-citizens. College students may lose financial aid eligibility and face disciplinary action from their institution. Child custody and visitation rights can be jeopardized when a parent accumulates a DWI record, especially in cases involving a child passenger or repeat offenses.
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Our Lubbock drunk driving attorney team approaches each DWI case with a structured investigation and defense-building process. We begin by obtaining every piece of discoverable evidence from the State: the arrest report, officer narrative, dash-cam and body-cam video, in-car audio recordings, field sobriety test worksheets, portable breath test results, Intoxilyzer or blood-draw records, calibration and maintenance logs, officer training and certification files, and 911 or dispatch recordings. We scrutinize the timeline of events to identify gaps, inconsistencies, and violations of your constitutional rights or Texas procedural requirements.
We evaluate the legality of the initial traffic stop or vehicle detention. An officer must possess reasonable suspicion of traffic offense or criminal activity to justify a stop. If the stop lacked legal justification—for example, based on an alleged traffic violation that did not occur, reliance on an anonymous tip without corroboration, or a mistaken understanding of traffic law—we file a motion to suppress all evidence obtained as a result of the unlawful stop. Suppression of the stop typically results in dismissal of the entire case.
Our DWI representation includes aggressive pre-trial motion practice to exclude unreliable or unlawfully obtained evidence. We file motions to suppress the traffic stop, suppress field sobriety tests, suppress breath or blood test results, suppress statements made without Miranda warnings, and exclude expert testimony that fails to meet Texas Rules of Evidence standards. Successful suppression motions often lead to dismissal or significant charge reduction because the State cannot meet its burden of proof without the excluded evidence.
When appropriate, we negotiate with Lubbock County prosecutors to secure favorable plea agreements that avoid jail time, reduce charges to non-DWI offenses such as obstruction of a highway or reckless driving, or divert first-time offenders into pretrial intervention programs. We also pursue deferred adjudication probation, which allows eligible defendants to avoid a final conviction on their record if they successfully complete probation terms. Our goal in plea negotiations is always to minimize criminal and administrative penalties while preserving your driving privileges, employment, and professional standing.
If your case proceeds to trial in Lubbock County criminal court, we prepare a comprehensive defense for presentation to a judge or jury. Our DWI attorney in Lubbock conducts thorough cross-examination of the arresting officer, exposes weaknesses in the State’s scientific evidence, presents expert witnesses to challenge breath or blood test reliability, and argues reasonable doubt based on the facts and law. We have tried DWI cases to verdict in Lubbock County and surrounding jurisdictions, securing not guilty verdicts and case dismissals through skilled courtroom advocacy.
First-time DWI offenders in Lubbock County often qualify for programs and dispositions that can minimize long-term consequences. Our Lubbock DUI lawyer team evaluates eligibility for pretrial diversion, deferred adjudication probation, and reduction to lesser charges. First-offense defendants with no prior criminal history, no accident, no child passenger, and a BAC below 0.15 represent the strongest candidates for favorable outcomes.
We present mitigating evidence to prosecutors and the court, including your employment record, family responsibilities, community ties, completion of alcohol education classes, and participation in counseling or treatment. We also secure character reference letters and document steps you have taken to address any underlying issues. These efforts increase the likelihood of charge reduction, probation instead of jail, and deferred adjudication that avoids a final conviction on your record.
| First-Offense DWI Disposition | Requirements and Conditions | Record Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Pretrial Diversion | Complete education classes, community service, supervision period; typically 6–12 months | Case dismissed upon successful completion; no conviction |
| Deferred Adjudication Probation | Plead guilty/no contest; court defers finding of guilt; complete probation terms (typically 12–24 months) | No final conviction if probation completed successfully; record subject to nondisclosure petition |
| Straight Probation | Final conviction entered; probation in lieu of jail; conditions include fines, classes, community service | Conviction on record; cannot be sealed or expunged |
| Reduction to Reckless Driving or Obstruction | Negotiate plea to non-DWI offense; fines and court costs | No DWI conviction; reduced insurance and license consequences |
An arrest for DWI in Lubbock triggers an automatic administrative license suspension by the Texas Department of Public Safety, separate from the criminal case. This administrative license revocation (ALR) process allows the State to suspend your driver’s license based solely on chemical test failure or refusal, regardless of whether you are ultimately convicted of the criminal offense. You must request an ALR hearing within 15 days of your arrest to contest the suspension and preserve your driving privileges during the pendency of your case.
Our DWI defense attorney practice includes representation at ALR hearings before administrative law judges. We subpoena the arresting officer, cross-examine witnesses, challenge the legality of the stop and arrest, dispute the validity of the breath or blood test, and present evidence that you were not intoxicated or that the officer failed to follow statutory procedures under Texas Transportation Code Chapter 724. Success at an ALR hearing prevents license suspension entirely, even if the criminal case is still pending.
When license suspension cannot be avoided, we immediately apply for an occupational driver’s license that allows you to drive for essential purposes: work, school, medical appointments, and household duties. An occupational license requires court approval, proof of financial responsibility (SR-22 insurance), and payment of fees. We prepare and file the occupational license petition, represent you at the hearing, and secure a court order authorizing restricted driving privileges that keep you employed and mobile during your suspension period.
A second or subsequent DWI charge in Lubbock exposes you to significantly harsher penalties, including mandatory minimum jail time, longer probation periods, higher fines, extended license suspension, and lifetime ignition interlock requirements. Prosecutors and judges view repeat offenders as higher-risk defendants and are less inclined to offer diversion programs or deferred adjudication. A third DWI becomes a third-degree felony, punishable by two to ten years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Felony DWI defendants lose the right to vote during incarceration, lose firearm possession rights, and face collateral consequences affecting employment, housing, and professional licensing.
Our Lubbock DWI defense practice represents clients with prior convictions who face enhanced charges. We challenge the admissibility of prior convictions used for enhancement by scrutinizing whether you received proper admonishments during prior plea proceedings, whether you were represented by counsel, and whether the prior judgments meet legal requirements for enhancement under Texas Penal Code Section 49.09. If a prior conviction is legally defective, we file motions to strike the enhancement paragraph, reducing the charge classification and available punishment range.
When intoxicated driving results in serious bodily injury or death to another person, prosecutors file the most serious intoxication-related offenses: intoxication assault (third-degree or second-degree felony) and intoxication manslaughter (second-degree felony). These cases carry prison sentences ranging from two to twenty years and involve complex issues of causation, accident reconstruction, medical evidence, and expert testimony. The State must prove not only that you were intoxicated, but also that your intoxication caused the injury or death.
Our DWI defense lawyer team has experience defending serious intoxication felony cases in Lubbock County, Texas. We retain accident reconstruction experts, toxicologists, and medical specialists to challenge the State’s causation theory and present alternative explanations for the collision and resulting injuries. We examine road conditions, vehicle defects, actions of other drivers, and victim conduct to develop defenses based on comparative responsibility or intervening causes. These high-stakes cases require aggressive investigation, skilled expert testimony, and experienced trial advocacy to achieve the best possible outcome.
Commercial driver’s license holders face uniquely severe consequences from a DWI arrest in Lubbock. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations and Texas Transportation Code provisions impose a lower BAC threshold—0.04 for commercial vehicle operators—and mandate automatic disqualification for certain intoxication-related offenses. A single DWI conviction, even in a personal vehicle, triggers a one-year CDL disqualification for a first offense and a lifetime disqualification for a second conviction. Refusal to submit to chemical testing in a commercial vehicle results in immediate disqualification. For professional drivers whose livelihood depends on maintaining a valid CDL, these penalties are career-ending.
Our CDL DWI attorney practice focuses on preserving commercial driving privileges through aggressive defense in both criminal court and administrative proceedings. We work to secure dismissals, acquittals, or charge reductions to non-disqualifying offenses that allow you to keep your CDL and continue earning a living. When disqualification cannot be avoided, we assist with hardship applications, restricted license petitions, and eventual reinstatement proceedings to minimize the duration of your career interruption.
A CDL DWI case requires specialized knowledge of the interplay between state criminal law, federal commercial driving regulations, and Texas Department of Public Safety administrative procedures. Our CDL DUI defense strategies include challenging the traffic stop, questioning the validity of portable breath test results used for roadside screening, disputing the accuracy of evidentiary breath or blood tests, and demonstrating compliance with all commercial vehicle regulations at the time of arrest.
We represent truck drivers, bus operators, delivery drivers, and other commercial vehicle operators in Lubbock, TX facing DWI charges. Our representation includes criminal defense in Lubbock County court, administrative license revocation hearings, and CDL disqualification appeals. We coordinate with your employer when appropriate to provide documentation and legal updates that may affect your employment status during the pendency of your case.