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DUI Breath Tests in Colorado
If you are reading about how a DUI breath test works, you have probably blown into one recently. The breath test is the most common chemical test requested by Colorado police officers after an arrest for DUI. The Colorado Express Consent Law gives the DMV the authority to revoke a driver's license if they refuse to provide a specimen after an officer requests one following a lawful impaired driving arrest.
Breath specimens are usually favored by Colorado DUI officers for the following reasons:
1. Convenient. Breath testing machines are located at the police station or jail.
2. Fast results. A breath machine shows the officer the BrAC immediately.
3. Self serve. Certified officers can operate an I 9000 without needing help from any other officer or technician.
4. Harder to attack in court. Officers know that at a DUI trial, it is harder for experts to attack a breath test result
and there is no ability for a DUI lawyer to independently re-test a breath specimen.
Since 2013, Colorado has used the CMI Intoxilyzer 9000 for DUI breath alcohol measurements. Colorado was one of the first states in the U.S. to move to the Intoxilyzer 9000. The company that sells the 9000, CMI, has been making DUI breath test machines for police for decades. The I-9000 is their newest addition to their line of breath alcohol testing devices.

CMI Intoxilyzer 9000



Police breath test machines are only capable of measuring breath alcohol concentration. The I-9000 cannot detect marijuana or other drugs that may be suspected by a DUI officer. In cases where impairment is believed to be from something other than alcohol, officers will often ask for a blood specimen. In some cases, officers will offer a breath test, and after they see there is no/ little alcohol in the result, they will then request a blood sample to send for lab testing.
Jim Medley's Expertise in DUI Breath Test Defense
Attorney Jim Medley has been dealing with CMI Intoxilyzer machines since the 1990s. The Intoxilyzer 5000 was in use when Jim was a police officer. The I-5000 was in wide use across the country until the early 2010s when the I-9000 began to be adopted in many states.
The chemistry and physiology behind DUI breath alcohol testing science has not changed since the 1950s. Alcohol, because it is a volatile, has a gaseous phase at normal temperatures. This causes estimable amounts of alcohol in the bloodstream to diffuse into the air in a person's lungs; the more alcohol in the blood, the more alcohol will be in the breath. Once inside the Intoxilyzer, the concentration of alcohol in the breath is measured using an analytical technique called infrared spectroscopy. The use of spectroscopy to distinguish volatile organic compounds in not a precise science and it can make mistakes.

Certified Breath Test Operator

Jim Medley first attended advanced training in alcohol breath testing in early 2004. This forensic course was taught in part by a medical doctor who was board certified in Forensic Toxicology. Attorney Medley obtained hands-on experience operating a CMI Intoxilyzer device and detailed knowledge about the chemical principles behind how machine works and in what areas the Intoxilyzer can be questioned.
Certified Breath Test Instructor
