Criminal Defense

Executive DUI in Michigan: What's Actually at Stake Beyond the Penalties

April 2026 Updated 2026-04-14 7 min read
Quick Answer

The standard penalties for a first OWI in Michigan — up to 93 days in jail, fines up to $500, and a 30-day license suspension — are only part of the picture for executives and professionals. Corporate officers may face board disclosure obligations, SEC and FINRA reporting requirements, and morals clause review under their employment agreements. A conviction can trigger termination provisions, disqualify executives from directorships, and create liability under D&O insurance policies. The difference between a conviction and a reduced charge — or between specific plea language — can determine whether a career survives.

The criminal penalties for a first-offense OWI in Michigan are well known: up to 93 days in jail (rarely served for a first offense), fines up to $500, a 30-day hard license suspension followed by 150 days of restricted driving, up to 360 hours of community service, and 6 points on your driving record. For most people, these consequences are manageable.

For executives, business owners, and professionals, the real consequences are not in the criminal code. They are in your employment agreement, your board disclosure obligations, your regulatory filings, and your professional reputation. These collateral consequences are where careers end — not in the courtroom.

Standard Penalties vs. Executive Exposure

The gap between what the statute says and what actually happens to an executive after an OWI is significant:

Criminal Penalty Executive Consequence
Up to 93 days jail (rarely served) Board notification and potential termination review
$500 fine Morals clause triggered — "for cause" termination risk
30-day license suspension FINRA Form U4 amendment — visible on BrokerCheck permanently
6 points on driving record SEC disclosure for public company officers
Possible probation D&O insurance implications
Criminal record (unless expunged) Employment agreement disclosure obligations

The criminal penalties are finite and predictable. The career consequences can be permanent.

Employment Agreements and Morals Clauses

Most senior executives have written employment agreements that address criminal conduct — either through explicit notification requirements or through morals clauses that define terminable behavior.

Notification Requirements

Many executive agreements require prompt notification to the employer — often the board of directors or the general counsel — upon arrest or criminal charge. The timeframe varies: 24 hours, 48 hours, "promptly," or "as soon as practicable." The notification obligation typically extends to any criminal charge, not just convictions.

Failing to disclose when required is often treated as a separate breach of the employment agreement. An executive who conceals an arrest may face termination for the concealment even if the underlying charge is ultimately dismissed or reduced.

Morals Clauses

Morals clauses — sometimes called "conduct clauses" or "reputational clauses" — give employers the right to terminate an executive whose personal conduct damages the company's reputation or violates community standards. The typical formulation covers:

Whether a first-offense DUI triggers a morals clause depends on the specific language, the circumstances (Was there an accident? Was it publicized? Was the BAC extremely high?), and the company's enforcement history.

"For Cause" vs. "Without Cause" Termination

The distinction matters enormously for compensation. Termination "for cause" typically forfeits severance, unvested equity, and deferred compensation. Termination "without cause" typically triggers severance payments, accelerated vesting, and other protections.

If the employer treats a DUI as "for cause" termination, the executive can lose millions in accumulated compensation. This makes the criminal defense strategy directly relevant to the employment outcome — a reduction from OWI to a lesser charge may eliminate the "for cause" argument.

SEC and FINRA Obligations

FINRA-Registered Representatives

Any individual registered with FINRA — including financial advisors, brokers, and registered representatives — must amend their Form U4 within 30 days of being charged with or convicted of a criminal offense. This includes:

The U4 amendment is visible on FINRA's BrokerCheck database — a public tool that clients, prospective employers, and regulators use to evaluate financial professionals. The disclosure remains on BrokerCheck permanently, even if the charge is later dismissed.

Failure to timely amend the U4 is itself a FINRA violation that can result in fines, suspension, or expulsion.

Statutory Disqualification

Certain criminal convictions trigger statutory disqualification under the Securities Exchange Act — meaning the individual cannot be associated with any FINRA member firm without a special application (MC-400). Felony convictions and certain financial misdemeanor convictions qualify.

A first-offense OWI misdemeanor does not typically trigger statutory disqualification, but the permanent U4 disclosure alone can damage a financial professional's career and client relationships.

Public Company Officers and Directors

Officers and directors of SEC-reporting companies face additional disclosure obligations. Criminal charges may need to be disclosed in proxy statements, annual reports, or other SEC filings depending on the nature of the charge and the company's disclosure policies.

D&O Insurance Implications

Directors and Officers (D&O) insurance policies often contain exclusions for criminal conduct. A criminal conviction can:

Executives should review their D&O coverage and understand how a criminal charge affects their protection.

Professional Licensing Overlap

For executives who also hold professional licenses — a physician who is also a hospital administrator, a CPA who serves as CFO, an attorney serving as general counsel — the licensing consequences compound the employment consequences.

An OWI charge may trigger:

Each of these proceedings operates on its own timeline, with its own rules, and the outcome in one can affect the others. A detailed discussion of professional licensing consequences is available in our article on how criminal charges affect professional licenses.

Media and Reputation

When Arrests Become Public

In Michigan, arrest records are generally public. Booking information, mug shots, and court filings can be accessed by media outlets and published. For executives whose names are recognizable in their industry or community, a DUI arrest can generate unwanted attention.

The risk is amplified by:

Managing the Narrative

There are limits to what can be done to prevent public exposure, but the defense strategy should consider:

Defense Strategies for Executives

The defense approach for an executive mirrors the standard OWI defense — with the added dimension of evaluating every tactical decision through the lens of career consequences.

Challenging the Traffic Stop

If the initial stop was unconstitutional — no reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation or criminal activity — all evidence obtained after the stop may be suppressed. This is the cleanest defense because it can result in complete dismissal.

Contesting Chemical Tests

Breath and blood tests are subject to procedural requirements, calibration standards, and chain-of-custody rules. Challenges to test accuracy or admissibility can eliminate the prosecution's strongest evidence.

Negotiating Charge Reductions

For executives, the specific charge matters more than for most defendants. The difference between an OWI conviction and an Operating While Visibly Impaired (OWVI) plea can determine whether a morals clause is triggered, whether "for cause" termination is viable, and how the disposition appears on regulatory filings.

Deferred Adjudication

First-time offenders may be eligible for deferred adjudication programs that, upon successful completion, result in the charge being dismissed. This outcome is significantly better for employment and licensing purposes than a conviction — though FINRA and some licensing boards may still require disclosure of the original charge.

Expungement

Michigan law now allows expungement of first-offense OWI convictions after a five-year waiting period. Expungement removes the conviction from most background checks and public court records. However, FINRA disclosures are permanent and are not affected by state expungement.

The Bottom Line

A DUI is not the end of a career — but only if the defense strategy accounts for the full range of consequences from the beginning. The criminal penalties are the starting point, not the endpoint. Employment agreements, regulatory obligations, licensing requirements, and reputational considerations all shape the defense approach.

For executives and professionals in Oakland County and Southeast Michigan, the defense of an OWI charge requires an attorney who understands not just the criminal law, but the professional landscape in which the charge creates consequences.

Do I have to disclose a DUI to my employer?
It depends on your employment agreement. Many executive contracts include notification requirements for arrests or criminal charges — some require disclosure within 24 to 48 hours. Review your agreement immediately after an arrest. Failing to disclose when required can be independent grounds for termination, separate from the charge itself.
Can a DUI trigger a morals clause in my employment agreement?
Yes. Morals clauses typically cover conduct that brings the company into disrepute or reflects negatively on the organization. A DUI arrest — particularly one that generates media attention — can trigger review and potential termination under these provisions. The specific language of your morals clause determines whether a DUI qualifies.
What about SEC and FINRA reporting obligations?
FINRA-registered representatives must amend their Form U4 within 30 days of any criminal charge. The amendment is visible on BrokerCheck permanently, even if the charge is later dismissed. Officers and directors of public companies may also have disclosure obligations under SEC rules.
Is a DUI different for someone with a CDL?
Yes. Commercial driver's license holders face a one-year CDL disqualification for a first OWI — in any vehicle, not just a commercial vehicle. A second OWI results in lifetime CDL disqualification. The BAC threshold for commercial vehicles is .04, half the standard .08 limit.
Can the charge be reduced to protect my career?
In many cases, yes. Negotiating a reduction from OWI to Operating While Visibly Impaired (OWVI), or reaching a deferred adjudication arrangement, can make a significant difference in employment and licensing consequences. The specific outcome depends on the facts, the evidence, and the jurisdiction.
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Executive Facing OWI Charges in Michigan?

Josh Kaplan defends executives and professionals throughout Oakland County and Southeast Michigan — from challenging the traffic stop to negotiating charge reductions that protect your career. Contact us for a confidential consultation.

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