The Beginning Date for License Revocations Following Conviction for DWI
Several recent stories in the News and Observer (here, here, here, and here) have chronicled the SBI’s investigation into orders entered in certain impaired driving cases by former Wake County District Court Judge Kristin Ruth, who resigned last month. Newspaper reports characterize the orders at issue as purporting to alter the conviction date for impaired driving convictions that originally were entered in district court, were appealed to superior court, and subsequently were remanded to district court for resentencing after the appeals were withdrawn. (For more about the appeal, remand and resentencing process in DWI cases, see this post.) Ruth, who was not the judge who re-sentenced the named defendants in district court after their cases were remanded, reportedly entered orders after the new sentencing hearing was held and the new judgment imposed stating that the defendants’ convictions occurred at some earlier date. Ruth has stated that James Crouch, a defense attorney, submitted the orders to her and that she signed them without reading them. Newspaper reports suggest that the benefit that might inure to a defendant from changing the date of his or her conviction or judgment for an impaired driving offense is a shortening of his or her post-conviction license revocation period. DMV, however, reportedly has said that none of the defendants named in the orders had their licenses reinstated early. That these post-conviction orders did not so benefit the defendants involved is not particularly surprising in light of the procedures that govern license suspension after a conviction for DWI. [...]


