Birmingham DUI Lawyer
Jim Parkman has been walking into Birmingham courtrooms since 1979.
A DUI arrest in Birmingham starts two separate fights at the same time. One is the criminal case that could put you in jail, cost you thousands of dollars in fines, and leave a permanent mark on your record. The other is an administrative case against your driver’s license, and that one has a deadline. You have 10 days from the date of your arrest to request a hearing with the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency. Miss it, and your license gets suspended automatically, no matter what happens in criminal court.
Jim Parkman has been defending people in Alabama courtrooms since 1979. He is the attorney who won a full acquittal on all 36 counts for HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy in one of the largest corporate fraud trials in American history. He has tried cases in the Jefferson County Circuit Court, the Birmingham Municipal Court, and the federal courthouse downtown for decades. When you hire a DUI lawyer in Birmingham, you are hiring someone to stand between you and a prosecutor. It helps when the prosecutor already knows your lawyer will take the case to trial.
Arrested for DUI in Birmingham? The 10-day clock is already running. Call Jim Parkman Law at
(205) 573-6001 for a free consultation. Available day or night.
Why Birmingham Drivers Call Jim Parkman After a DUI Arrest
Alabama DUI Law: What the State Has to Prove
Alabama’s DUI statute is Section 32-5A-191 of the Code of Alabama. Under that law, you can be convicted of driving under the influence if you drive or are in actual physical control of a vehicle while:
- Your blood alcohol concentration is 0.08 percent or higher
- You are under the influence of alcohol to a degree that makes you incapable of driving safely
- You are under the influence of a controlled substance that impairs your ability to drive
- You are under the combined influence of alcohol and drugs
- You are under the influence of any substance that impairs your mental or physical faculties
Two details in that statute trip people up. First, “actual physical control” means you do not have to be driving. People have been arrested for DUI in Birmingham while sitting in a parked car with the keys in reach. Second, you can be charged even with a BAC below 0.08 if the officer believes your driving was impaired. The legal limit creates a presumption of impairment, but it is not the only path to a conviction.
Some drivers face lower limits. If you are under 21, the limit is 0.02 percent. School bus and daycare drivers are held to 0.02 percent while on duty. Commercial drivers are held to 0.04 percent, and a DUI can end a CDL career even when the criminal penalties seem manageable. If you drive for a living, tell your attorney immediately, because the defense strategy changes.
The 10-Day Rule: Your License Is on a Deadline
When you were arrested, the officer most likely took your Alabama driver’s license and handed you a form that serves as a temporary driving permit. What many people do not realize is that the form also starts a countdown. You have 10 days to request an administrative hearing with ALEA to contest the suspension of your license. If you do nothing, the suspension takes effect automatically about 45 days after the arrest.
Requesting the hearing does two things. It puts the suspension on hold until the hearing happens, which keeps you driving legally in the meantime. It also gives your attorney an early look at the state’s evidence and a chance to question the arresting officer under oath before the criminal case heats up. Testimony from that hearing can become valuable ammunition later. This is one of the biggest reasons to call a Birmingham DUI attorney in the first few days after an arrest rather than waiting for your court date.
Where Your Birmingham DUI Case Will Be Heard
Knowing the courthouse matters more in DUI defense than almost anywhere else, because the court that hears your case depends on who arrested you and where.
If a Birmingham police officer made the arrest inside the city limits, your case typically starts in Birmingham Municipal Court downtown. Municipal court moves fast, the dockets are crowded, and the judges see DUI cases every single day. If you are convicted there, Alabama law gives you the right to appeal to the Jefferson County Circuit Court for a brand new trial, called a trial de novo, where you can demand a jury. That appeal right is a significant piece of leverage, and an attorney who understands how to use it can change the entire posture of a case.
If a Jefferson County sheriff’s deputy or an Alabama state trooper made the arrest, the case usually begins in Jefferson County District Court, with felony DUI cases handled at the Jefferson County Circuit Court at 716 N. 21st Street. In rare situations, such as an arrest on federal property, a DUI can even land in the Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse on 5th Avenue North. Jim Parkman has appeared in all of these courtrooms for decades. He knows the prosecutors, the judges, and the unwritten procedures that never show up in a statute book.
Penalties for a DUI Conviction in Birmingham, Alabama
Alabama punishes DUI on an escalating scale, and prior convictions within the last 10 years count against you.
First offense DUI
Up to one year in jail, a fine between $600 and $2,100, a 90-day driver’s license suspension, and mandatory completion of a court referral program or DUI school. Most first offenders can avoid the suspension entirely by electing to install an ignition interlock device for 90 days.
Second offense DUI
A minimum of five days in jail or 30 days of community service, up to one year in jail, a fine between $1,100 and $5,100, and a one-year revocation of driving privileges.
Third offense DUI
A minimum of 60 days in jail, up to one year, a fine between $2,100 and $10,100, and a three-year revocation.
Fourth and subsequent offenses
A fourth DUI within 10 years is a Class C felony in Alabama. That means a state prison sentence of at least one year and one day, up to 10 years, a fine up to $10,100, and a five-year revocation. A felony conviction also strips rights that a misdemeanor never touches.
Aggravating factors raise the stakes at every level. If your BAC was 0.15 percent or higher, Alabama doubles the minimum punishment and requires an ignition interlock device for at least a year. Having a child under 14 in the vehicle, causing an accident with injuries, or refusing the breath test can each trigger enhanced penalties or mandatory interlock periods.
The numbers above are only the direct costs. A DUI conviction also means higher insurance rates for years, potential problems with employment and professional licenses, and a permanent criminal record, because Alabama does not allow expungement of DUI convictions.
Every one of these penalties can be fought. Before you plead guilty to anything, let Jim Parkman look at your case for free. Call
(205) 573-6001.
Refused the Breath Test? Here Is What Alabama's Implied Consent Law Means
By driving on Alabama roads, you have already agreed to submit to a breath, blood, or urine test after a lawful DUI arrest. That is the state’s implied consent law. If you refused the test, ALEA will suspend your license for 90 days on a first refusal, and you cannot get a restricted license during that period. The refusal also becomes evidence the prosecutor will use against you, and it triggers a mandatory ignition interlock requirement if you are later convicted.
A refusal complicates a case, but it does not doom one. Without a BAC number, the state’s case rests entirely on the officer’s observations and the field sobriety tests, and those are the most attackable pieces of evidence in any DUI file. If you refused, do not assume the worst. Get the police report in front of an experienced Birmingham DUI lawyer and find out what the state actually has.
How Jim Parkman Fights DUI Charges
Every DUI case starts with the same question: was the stop legal? An officer needs reasonable suspicion to pull you over. If the stop fails, everything that came after it, including the breath test, can be suppressed. From there, the defense works through the case piece by piece.
Challenging the Traffic Stop
Weaving within your own lane, driving late at night, or leaving a bar parking lot is not automatically reasonable suspicion. Dash cam and body cam footage often tells a different story than the police report, and requesting that footage early is one of the first moves in every case.
Attacking the Field Sobriety Tests
The standardized tests are only meaningful when administered exactly according to NHTSA protocol. Uneven pavement, poor lighting, bad footwear, medical conditions, and officer error all corrupt the results. Most officers administer these tests imperfectly, and a skilled cross examination brings that out.
Questioning the Breath Test
Breath machines require regular calibration and proper administration, including an observation period before the test. Maintenance logs and operator certifications are discoverable, and problems show up more often than people expect. A machine with a spotty maintenance record produces a number a jury has every reason to doubt.
The Rising BAC Defense
Alcohol keeps absorbing into your bloodstream after you stop drinking. A test taken an hour after the stop can show a number well above what your BAC actually was while you were behind the wheel, which is the only moment that legally matters.
Medical Conditions and False Positives
Diabetes, hypoglycemia, acid reflux, and even certain diets can produce falsely elevated breath test readings. When a client’s health history explains the number, that history becomes the defense.
Breaks in the Chain of Custody
Blood samples must be drawn, stored, and tested according to strict procedures. Any gap in that chain, from the draw to the lab bench, puts the result in question.
When the evidence holds up, the job shifts to damage control, and that is where local relationships and trial credibility earn their keep. Depending on the court, your record, and the facts, options may include reduced charges, diversion or DUI court programs, or sentencing arrangements that protect your job and your license. A lawyer who tries cases negotiates from strength. A lawyer who pleads everything out negotiates from hope.
What to Do in the First 48 Hours After a Birmingham DUI Arrest
Write down everything you remember while it is fresh. What you ate and drank, when, and where. What the officer said, what tests you took, and how the arrest unfolded. Small details win suppression hearings.
Do not talk about the arrest with anyone but your lawyer, and stay off social media entirely. Prosecutors check.
Save every document you were given, especially the form that serves as your temporary license. Then call an attorney before the 10-day administrative deadline passes. The earlier a defense lawyer gets involved, the more evidence is still available, from surveillance footage at the location of the stop to witnesses whose memories fade fast.
Serving Birmingham and All of Jefferson County
Jim Parkman Law defends DUI cases throughout the Birmingham metro area, including Hoover, Vestavia Hills, Homewood, Mountain Brook, Trussville, Bessemer, Gardendale, Fultondale, and Center Point, along with cases across Jefferson and Shelby Counties. The office is located at 850 Corporate Parkway, Suite 100, in Birmingham, and consultations are always free and confidential.
Birmingham DUI Frequently Asked Questions
Talk to a Birmingham DUI Attorney Today
An arrest is not a conviction. It is the beginning of a process, and the decisions you make in the first few days shape everything that follows. Jim Parkman has spent more than 45 years defending people in Alabama courtrooms, from routine traffic stops gone wrong to the most publicized trials in the state’s history. He will tell you honestly what your case looks like, what your options are, and what he would do if he were sitting in your chair.
Call Jim Parkman Law at
(205) 573-6001 for a free, confidential consultation. Available 24/7, because DUI arrests do not happen during business hours.