Re: Virginia's First Offender Program
Posted by:
Sven
()
Date: November 07, 2012 03:40PM
t-mac Wrote:
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> I have recently been summoned to appear in court
> for the possession of marijuana. From what I've
> researched I expect to have to do virginia's first
> offender program. I know the basics of it (6
> months no license, 24 hours community service,
> drug awareness classes and random drug testing)
> but I'd like to hear from someone who has actually
> experienced it or knows someone who has so I can
> get a sense of how it will really affect my
> lifestyle for the 6 months it lasts. I'm a
> freshman in college and would really like to be
> able to go out and drink a little bit, at least
> once a week. What are the details of the
> breathalyzer system they have? I've heard it's
> "random". Does that mean that any given morning
> someone could show up at my door and force me to
> take the breathalyzer test, or does it mean on the
> mornings of the saturday drug/alcohol awareness
> classes I may or may not have to take one? How
> exactly does it work? obviously for it to be
> random for any day of the week they'd have to A)
> have someone come to my door or B) call me on the
> mornings they decide to make me take the test and
> have me come in on my own..both of these sound
> ridiculously flawed and unreasonable. could
> someone help me understand how this works (details
> on things other than the breathalyzer part would
> be helpful too).
> Thanks
Your preconception of the first-offender 'treatment' program is preposterously inaccurate. Nobody will appear at your residence and demand a breathalyzer, considering your charge was simple possession of marijuana and not an alcohol-related offense.
6 months restricted license means you'll be permitted to drive to classes, work, meetings with your probation officer and ADS classes which you will undoubtedly be ordered to enroll in. This does not necessarily mean ALL of your driving privileges will be revoked for 6 months.
However, you won't be able to drive whenever you please, without unnecessary legal repercussions if you're caught.
The ADS program isn't likely to cramp your style, aside from being a pain in the ass for a couple months. Generally the court requires 1st-time offenders to attend 3-hour ADS sessions once a week, and participants are subject to random drug screenings. It would be wise to abstain from marijuana and all other drugs known to linger in your system longer than a day or two.
Follow the rules, don't skip meetings, pass the whiz-quizzes and you're off the hook.