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Steve Bowling Law, PLLC — Austin Office
⏱ You have 15 days to save your license

Austin DWI Defense Attorney

Your attorney used to be the officer on the other side of the traffic stop. He knows how DWI cases are built — the training, the procedures, the shortcuts — and he knows exactly where they break down.

Call (512) 991-1111 — 24/7
Request Online

A Former Police Officer Who Now Fights DWI Cases from the Other Side

Most DWI attorneys learned about field sobriety tests from a manual. Steve Bowling learned them by administering them on the side of the road at 2 AM.

As a former law enforcement officer and military veteran, the lead attorney at Texas Defense Team’s Austin office has a perspective on DWI defense that most attorneys simply don’t have. He’s been through the same DWI detection training that the officer who arrested you went through. He knows the 24-step protocol for administering the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus test. He knows the 8 clues officers are trained to look for on the Walk-and-Turn. And he knows that most officers don’t follow these protocols perfectly — because he’s seen it from the inside.

That law enforcement background changes everything about how your DWI case is defended. It’s not about finding technicalities. It’s about knowing the standard the officer was supposed to meet, and holding them to it.

⏱ 15-Day Deadline: After a DWI arrest in Texas, you have only 15 days to request an ALR hearing to fight your automatic license suspension. If you miss this deadline, your license is suspended regardless of your criminal case. Call (512) 991-1111 now — we answer 24/7.

How a Former Officer Attacks DWI Evidence

Every piece of DWI evidence has a protocol. When the protocol isn’t followed perfectly, the evidence can be challenged. Here’s what a law enforcement background reveals about each type of evidence used against you.

The Traffic Stop

Officers need reasonable suspicion to pull you over. Weaving within your lane, driving slightly under the speed limit, or leaving a bar parking lot are NOT sufficient legal reasons in many cases.
A former officer knows the difference between legally sufficient reasonable suspicion and an officer fishing for a DWI arrest. If the stop was bad, everything after it gets thrown out.

Field Sobriety Tests (SFSTs)

The Walk-and-Turn, One-Leg Stand, and HGN test must be administered according to NHTSA protocol. Most officers deviate from the protocol without realizing it.
Officers are trained on specific instructions, specific demonstrations, and specific clue counts. If the officer skipped a step, gave wrong instructions, or counted clues incorrectly, the results are unreliable.

Breath Testing (Intoxilyzer)

Texas uses the Intoxilyzer 9000. The machine must be properly calibrated, the 15-minute observation period must be followed, and the operator must be currently certified.
Maintenance records, calibration logs, and operator certifications are all discoverable. Machines malfunction. Observation periods get cut short. Mouth alcohol from GERD or recent belching can spike readings.

Blood Draws

Blood draws require either your consent or a warrant. The blood must be drawn by qualified personnel, stored in the correct tube with the correct preservative, and maintained in a proper chain of custody.
Fermentation in improperly stored blood can inflate BAC results. Warrants with errors can be challenged. Delays between arrest and the blood draw affect accuracy. Every step in the chain of custody is attackable.

Dashcam & Body Camera

Most Austin PD and Travis County DWI stops are recorded. Officers write their reports hours or days later — the video often tells a different story.
When an officer’s report says you were “swaying and slurring” but the video shows you walking and talking normally, the case weakens dramatically. A former officer knows what to look for on both the video and the report.

Officer Testimony

The arresting officer will testify about their observations: odor of alcohol, bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, inability to follow instructions.
These observations are subjective. An attorney who used to make these same observations as an officer knows how to cross-examine them effectively — because he knows what training the officer received and what they were supposed to document.

Texas DWI Penalties: What You’re Facing

Texas DWI penalties escalate quickly. Understanding what’s at stake is the first step toward building your defense.

Offense Classification Jail Time Fine License Suspension
1st DWI Class B Misdemeanor 72 hrs – 180 days Up to $2,000 90 days – 1 year
1st DWI (BAC ≥ 0.15) Class A Misdemeanor Up to 1 year Up to $4,000 90 days – 1 year
2nd DWI Class A Misdemeanor 30 days – 1 year Up to $4,000 180 days – 2 years
3rd DWI 3rd Degree Felony 2 – 10 years (prison) Up to $10,000 180 days – 2 years
DWI with Child Passenger State Jail Felony 180 days – 2 years Up to $10,000 180 days
Intoxication Assault 3rd Degree Felony 2 – 10 years Up to $10,000 90 days – 1 year
Intoxication Manslaughter 2nd Degree Felony 2 – 20 years Up to $10,000 180 days – 2 years

Beyond criminal penalties: A DWI conviction in Texas also triggers surcharges of $1,000–$2,000/year for three years, mandatory SR-22 insurance (which can double or triple your premiums), potential ignition interlock requirements, and a permanent criminal record that shows up on background checks for employment, housing, and professional licensing.

What to Do After a DWI Arrest in Austin

The decisions you make in the first hours and days after a DWI arrest can determine the outcome of your case. Here’s the timeline that matters.

Immediately (at the scene)

Exercise Your Right to Remain Silent

You are not required to answer questions about where you were, how much you drank, or where you’re coming from. Politely decline. Everything you say is being recorded and will be used against you.

Within 24 hours

Call a DWI Attorney

Call (512) 991-1111 — Sarah, our 24/7 lifelike receptionist, will connect you with the Austin office immediately. Even at 3 AM. Especially at 3 AM.

Within 15 days (CRITICAL)

Request Your ALR Hearing

Your attorney will file the ALR hearing request to fight your license suspension. This also gives us the chance to cross-examine the arresting officer under oath — before the criminal trial. Miss this deadline and your license is automatically suspended.

Within 30 days

Evidence Preservation & Investigation

Your attorney will subpoena dashcam/body camera footage, breath test maintenance records, blood test chain of custody documents, officer training records, and dispatch logs. Evidence can disappear — the sooner we start, the more we have to work with.

Ongoing

Build Your Defense

Every piece of evidence gets scrutinized against the protocols the officer was supposed to follow. Your attorney — a former officer who knows these protocols firsthand — builds the defense strategy around the specific weaknesses in your case.

Arrested for DWI in Austin? The Clock Is Ticking.

You have 15 days to save your license. Call now for a free, confidential consultation with a former police officer turned DWI defense attorney.

Call (512) 991-1111 — 24/7
Request Online

Frequently Asked Questions About Austin DWI Cases

What happens after a DWI arrest in Austin?

After a DWI arrest in Austin, you’ll be booked at the Travis County Jail and your driver’s license will be confiscated. You have only 15 days to request an ALR hearing to fight the automatic suspension of your license. Missing this deadline means an automatic suspension — regardless of what happens in your criminal case. Call a DWI attorney immediately.

Can a DWI be dismissed in Travis County?

Yes. DWI cases get dismissed when the evidence doesn’t hold up. Common grounds include improper traffic stops, incorrectly administered field sobriety tests, equipment calibration failures on the Intoxilyzer 9000, contaminated blood samples, and constitutional violations during the arrest. A former police officer turned defense attorney knows exactly where to look for these issues.

What are the penalties for a first DWI in Texas?

A first DWI is a Class B misdemeanor: 72 hours to 180 days in jail, up to $2,000 in fines, and 90 days to 1 year license suspension. If your BAC was 0.15 or higher, it becomes a Class A misdemeanor with up to $4,000 in fines and up to 1 year in jail. Beyond criminal penalties, expect surcharges of $1,000–$2,000/year for three years, SR-22 insurance requirements, and a permanent criminal record.

Should I refuse a breathalyzer in Texas?

Texas has an implied consent law — refusing triggers an automatic 180-day license suspension (2 years for subsequent refusals). However, the officer can still get a warrant for a blood draw. This is a complicated decision that depends on your specific circumstances. If you’ve already been arrested, call an attorney at (512) 991-1111 rather than trying to make this decision alone.

What is an ALR hearing and why do I only have 15 days?

An ALR (Administrative License Revocation) hearing is a separate proceeding from your criminal case that determines whether your license gets suspended. You have only 15 days from arrest to request it. Missing the deadline means automatic suspension. But the ALR hearing is also a strategic opportunity — your attorney can cross-examine the arresting officer under oath, revealing weaknesses before the criminal trial even begins.

How much does a DWI lawyer cost in Austin?

DWI defense fees vary based on whether it’s a first or subsequent offense, BAC level, whether an accident was involved, and case complexity. The initial consultation at the Austin office is always free. Call (512) 991-1111 to discuss your specific situation — you’ll get a clear understanding of costs before making any decisions.

This office is independently owned and operated by Steve Bowling Law, PLLC. The use of the Texas Defense Team name is a shared marketing platform and does not imply a partnership between offices. Affiliate Office Agreement | Attorney Advertising | Disclaimer
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