What if I fail to provide a specimen?
Failing to provide a specimen is a single offence but can be committed by failing
to provide a specimen of breath, blood or urine. At no stage will the officer or
the Crown Prosecution Service need to prove that you drove the vehicle. If following an attempt to
provide a specimen of breath, no samples or only one sample has been provided,
the Intoxilyzer operator has a choice whether to restart the process or charge
you with the offence of fail to provide.
If you have failed to provide a sample whether you tried to provide a specimen or
made no attempt, you can defend the case if you can show the court that through
a physical or mental inability you could not provide a sample. You can be found
not guilty as you had a "reasonable excuse". As case law has developed it is now
clear that to show this mental or physical inability you need a medical expert to
confirm that your reason is genuine. The most common reasons presented at court
are lung problems or problems forming a seal around the mouthpiece.
Failure to provide a specimen of blood is an offence but if a sample of breath
has been obtained and you have opted to provide blood you should not be
convicted of failure to provide a sample. In this scenario the Prosecution
should proceed on the breath reading already obtained. If you have not provided
the sample of breath for whatever reason and the officer has required you to
give a sample of blood, rather than giving you an option, then you need have a
genuine medical reason if you do not provide a specimen. Furthermore you must
then convey this fact to the officer. He should then seek a medical opinion as
to whether to require a urine specimen or continue with a blood specimen. This
is important as it is very unsafe to require you to provide blood if you have a
medical reason not to do so. A common reason for failure to provide blood is due
to needle phobias. If you refuse on this basis the matter is defendable but an
expert assessment as to whether your needle phobia is genuine would be required.
Failure to provide a sample of urine is a very complex matter with a large number
of cases surrounding the area. As with all the fail to provide situations
failure to provide without a reasonable excuse will most likely lead to a
conviction. The complication comes however with the fact that with a urine
specimen, a time limit of one hour is placed upon the defendant to provide a
useable specimen of urine.
Sometimes anxiety can be a problem and it can be a reason why people cannot
provide a sample. The Court would have to be certain you had this inability at
the time the officer makes the request. The area is further complicated by the
fact officers are allowed the discretion to increase the time scales but of
course that means some people are given an hour and some are given longer which
is grossly unfair to those who are given only an hour and then fail. The best
advice we can give is to do all you can to comply and keep a note of events and
times. Then, if charged, contact us for advice
on your specific set of circumstances.
What are the punishments?
Refusing a test at the police station could get you 6 months imprisonment and a
£5,000 fine as well as a lengthy driving ban. Evidence of high levels of
intoxication and lack of co-operation at the police station can now greatly
increase your sentence. Moreover, if the courts believe you failed to provide a
specimen because you knew you were drink driving, your punishment could be more
severe. The punishment for failing to provide a specimen, as you can see, can be
far worse than that for drink driving because the Courts do not know how
intoxicated you are.