Criminal Defense

What to Do in the First 24 Hours After a DUI Arrest

Josh Kaplan
Josh Kaplan, Esq.
Founding Partner — Criminal Defense
5 min read

A DUI arrest is frightening — and the hours immediately following it are critical. The decisions you make in those first 24 hours can either strengthen your defense or seriously damage it. Here's exactly what you should do.

1. Stay Calm and Comply — But Know Your Rights

The moment you're pulled over, keep your hands visible and speak politely. You are required to provide your license, registration, and proof of insurance. However, you have the right to remain silent beyond that. Politely declining to answer questions about where you've been or how much you've had to drink is not the same as being uncooperative — it's protecting yourself.

Important: In Michigan, refusing a breathalyzer test after a lawful arrest triggers automatic license sanctions under implied consent law. This is a separate legal issue from the DUI charge itself — talk to an attorney before making this decision if you have time.

2. Do Not Discuss Your Case — With Anyone

Do not discuss the details of your arrest with other inmates, friends, or family until you've spoken with an attorney. Anything you say can be used against you — including casual conversations that aren't intended as statements.

3. Contact an Attorney Immediately

This is the most important step. A DUI attorney can:

The 14-day window to challenge your license suspension in Michigan is especially important — missing it means an automatic suspension.

4. Document Everything You Remember

As soon as you're able, write down everything you remember: where you were pulled over, what the officer said, what tests were administered, and the sequence of events. Memory fades quickly, and specific details — the instructions given during a field sobriety test, whether the officer followed proper protocol — can matter enormously.

5. Request a Hearing on Your License

In Michigan, a DUI arrest triggers two separate processes: the criminal case and a civil hearing with the Secretary of State over your driver's license. You must request that hearing within 14 days of your arrest or you lose the right to contest the suspension. An attorney can handle this on your behalf.

What Not to Do

The Bottom Line

A DUI arrest does not mean a DUI conviction. Breathalyzer results can be challenged. Traffic stops can be found unlawful. Field sobriety tests are subjective. But protecting your rights starts immediately — not weeks later when you finally call a lawyer.

If you or someone you know has been arrested for DUI in Michigan, call Dizik | Kaplan now. We're available 24/7.

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