Man escapes drink-driving charges by downing bottle of alcohol while pulled over in South Korea

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The defendant consumed an entire bottle of soju inside his car between the time he was pulled over and when he stepped out of the car 39 seconds later.

The defendant drank a bottle of alcohol in his car between the time he was pulled over by the South Korean police and when he stepped out of it 39 seconds later.

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: PIXABAY

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DAEGU – A South Korean court said on Oct 3 that it has cleared a 60-year-old man of drink-driving charges, ruling that his consumption of alcohol after stopping his car made it impossible to determine if he had been intoxicated while driving.

The man was initially suspected of driving 2.4km in the city of Daegu with a blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.128 per cent. He was stopped by the police in the city’s Jung-gu district at 11.40pm on Sept 16 and his breath was tested by the police 40 minutes later.

The driver was charged based on calculations used by the police to estimate his BAC before he had drunk the bottle of soju, a type of alcohol.

Drivers in South Korea whose BAC is 0.03 per cent or higher can be punished for drink driving, and those with a BAC of 0.07 per cent or higher can have their licence revoked.

However, the case was complicated by the fact that the defendant consumed an entire bottle of soju inside his car between the time he was pulled over and when he stepped out of the car 39 seconds later. Witnesses reported that he parked erratically and appeared to be staggering as soon as he exited his car.

“Even if the defendant did drink the entire bottle of soju as he claimed, it is unclear why he would appear intoxicated immediately afterward,” the Daegu court pointed out in its verdict. “But we cannot definitively confirm that he was drunk while driving based on such circumstantial evidence or speculation.”

To estimate the man’s BAC at the time he was driving, officials used the Widmark formula, which accounts for the passage of time, sex, weight and known consumption to determine prior alcohol levels. But the court ruled there was insufficient concrete evidence to conclusively say that he was intoxicated behind the wheel.

Some drivers have attempted to undermine the results of alcohol testing by immediately drinking large amounts of alcohol when they are pulled over.

South Korean police officers use various means to determine whether a person has been drink driving when an immediate BAC test is not feasible. These include the Widmark formula, or even having the suspect drink the same amount of alcohol afterwards to compare their level of intoxication. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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