Tampa Refusal to Submit to Breath Test Attorney
Refusing a breath test during a DUI stop in Florida sets off a separate legal process that runs alongside any criminal charge, and many drivers do not realize this until it is too late. A Tampa refusal to submit to breath test attorney can make a real difference in both of these proceedings, not just the DUI case itself. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm has handled these cases across Florida courts and understands how prosecutors and the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles approach refusal situations differently than standard DUI arrests.
Florida’s Implied Consent Law and What Refusal Actually Triggers
Florida operates under an implied consent framework. By driving on Florida roads, every driver has legally agreed in advance to submit to a breath, blood, or urine test if a law enforcement officer has probable cause to believe they are impaired. The agreement is built into the privilege of holding a Florida driver’s license.
When you refuse, two things happen simultaneously. First, DHSMV begins an administrative process to suspend your license. That suspension is automatic and happens independently of whether you are ever convicted of a DUI. Second, the refusal itself becomes evidence. Prosecutors argue that refusal suggests consciousness of guilt, meaning you knew a test would confirm impairment, so you declined. This is not a fair characterization in every case, but it is the argument the State will make.
First refusals result in a one-year administrative license suspension. A second refusal, on top of the suspension, is a first-degree misdemeanor under Florida Statute 316.1939. That means a second refusal carries potential jail time as a standalone criminal charge, separate from any underlying DUI allegation. This is a point that surprises many people. You can be charged with a crime simply for refusing the test a second time, even if the DUI charge is ultimately dismissed.
The 10-Day Window and Why Missing It Has Long-Term Consequences
After a refusal arrest in Florida, the arresting officer typically confiscates your license on the spot and issues a temporary driving permit. That permit is valid for ten days. Within those ten days, you or your attorney must request a formal review hearing with DHSMV. If that request does not go in, the one-year suspension (or longer for a second refusal) takes effect automatically and you lose the right to contest it administratively.
This is where delays become damaging. Some drivers wait to hire an attorney, thinking they will first see how the criminal side of the case develops. The administrative and criminal timelines do not move in parallel. The DHSMV clock runs regardless of what is happening in county court. Requesting that hearing on time does two things. It pauses the automatic suspension while the review is pending, and it gives your attorney a formal opportunity to challenge whether the officer had probable cause, whether the implied consent warning was properly given, and whether the refusal was even legally valid.
Omar Abdelghany handles both the administrative and criminal sides of these cases. Having one attorney managing both tracks matters because what happens in the DHSMV hearing can affect the criminal case strategy, and vice versa.
How Refusal Cases Are Actually Defended
A refusal does not eliminate defenses. In some ways, it opens up a different set of challenges that are specific to how the stop was conducted and how the officer handled the implied consent advisement.
Officers are required to inform you of the consequences of refusal before requesting the test. If that advisement was incomplete, incorrect, or never given, the refusal may be legally invalid. This is a procedural issue that can surface during both the administrative hearing and in criminal court.
The probable cause question matters too. If the officer lacked a lawful basis to initiate the traffic stop in the first place, any evidence gathered afterward, including the refusal, may be suppressible. Florida courts have addressed this in DUI contexts repeatedly. The analysis is fact-specific and depends on what the officer observed, when he observed it, and how he documented it in the arrest report.
Beyond procedural challenges, there are cases where a driver refused for a reason that had nothing to do with intoxication. Medical conditions, confusion about rights, language barriers, and situations where the officer’s conduct was coercive are all circumstances that can be relevant to how the refusal is characterized at trial or in plea negotiations. The prosecution’s “consciousness of guilt” argument is not automatic. It can be contested, and juries do not always accept it.
Hillsborough County Courts and Where These Cases Land
DUI and refusal cases in Tampa typically move through the Hillsborough County courthouse system, with misdemeanor matters handled in county court and felony-level DUI charges (involving serious injury, death, or a third or subsequent offense) going to circuit court. The administrative license suspension proceedings happen entirely through DHSMV, separate from the courthouse process, though they often run concurrently.
Tampa sits in an area with several heavily traveled corridors where DUI enforcement is common: Interstate 275, I-4, the Crosstown Expressway, and stretches of US-19 through the surrounding areas. Law enforcement agencies from Tampa PD, the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, and Florida Highway Patrol all conduct DUI stops in and around Hillsborough County, and each agency has its own practices around breath test requests and implied consent warnings. How an officer from one agency handles a stop can differ from another, and those procedural differences sometimes create legitimate legal issues in a case.
What People Ask About Breath Test Refusals in Florida
Can my refusal be used against me in court?
Yes. Under Florida law, a refusal to submit to a breath test is admissible as evidence in a DUI prosecution. Prosecutors will argue it shows you knew you were impaired. Whether that argument lands with a jury depends heavily on what else is in the record and how the refusal is contextualized through the defense.
Does refusing mean I avoid a DUI conviction?
Not necessarily. Prosecutors can still pursue a DUI conviction based on officer observations, dashcam footage, field sobriety test results, and witness accounts. Refusing the breath test removes one category of evidence but does not make the case disappear. It also creates a separate license suspension and, for repeat refusals, a separate criminal charge.
What happens to my license after a refusal in Florida?
Your license is suspended automatically upon refusal. A first refusal carries a one-year suspension. A second or subsequent refusal carries an 18-month suspension. Challenging the suspension requires a formal hearing request within ten days of arrest. If eligible, you may be able to obtain a hardship license for work or business purposes during the suspension period.
Is a second refusal really a criminal charge?
Yes. Under Florida Statute 316.1939, refusing to submit to a lawful breath test when you have a prior refusal on record is a first-degree misdemeanor, carrying up to one year in jail and a fine. This is separate from any DUI charge and can be prosecuted even if the underlying DUI is dropped or results in an acquittal.
What if I was never told about the implied consent warning?
Florida law requires officers to advise drivers of the implied consent law before requesting a breath test. If that warning was not given or was inadequate, the refusal may not be legally valid. This is one of the first issues an attorney will examine when reviewing your case.
Can I get a hardship license while my suspension is pending?
In many cases, yes. Florida allows for hardship licenses that permit driving for business, work, or school during a suspension. Eligibility depends on your prior driving record and whether you meet the requirements set by DHSMV. An attorney can walk through your specific situation and handle the application process.
Should I request the formal DHSMV review hearing even if I plan to plead guilty on the DUI?
Requesting the hearing preserves options and temporarily delays the suspension while the review is pending. It also gives your attorney an opportunity to gather information under oath from the arresting officer, which can be useful in the criminal case regardless of how that case ultimately resolves. There are very few reasons not to request the hearing within the ten-day window.
Speak With a Tampa Breath Test Refusal Defense Attorney
The administrative and criminal sides of a breath test refusal case require prompt attention and coordinated handling. OA Law Firm defends clients facing both the license consequences and the criminal charges that flow from a refusal in Tampa and throughout the Hillsborough County area. Omar Abdelghany personally handles every case in the office, meaning you deal directly with your attorney from the first consultation through the resolution of your case. If your refusal arrest was recent, the ten-day window for requesting your DHSMV hearing is already running. Contact OA Law Firm to speak with a Tampa breath test refusal defense attorney about your situation today.
