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Founding Partner, Einhorn Harris Ascher Barbarito & Frost, PC

Ask the Attorney: My Son Was Arrested for Underage Possession of Alcohol. Now What?

Dear Ask the Attorney:

My 18 year old son was a passenger in a car with 3 other boys when it was pulled over for speeding.  In the back seat was a case of beer and a half a pint of vodka.   The three other boys are all underage as well.   My son and the other boys were arrested for underage possession of alcohol.  None of them were arrested for DUI.

What is this going to mean for my son’s future?  He’s going off to college in the fall and I’m very concerned.

Mother’s Worst Nightmare

Our guest blogger is Matheu D. Nunn, Esq., an associate with the firm of Einhorn Harris Ascher Barbarito & Frost, PC. He works in both the Matrimonial Department and the Criminal Law Department.  He is also the current Morris Township Prosecutor.

Dear Mother: 

It sounds to me like your son was caught up in an oft-occurring issue with soon-to-be college kids – underage drinking or possession of alcohol. Of course, as you know, the legal age to possess or consume alcohol is 21; your son is not “of age” and so, this is a potentially serious issue. Why, you ask?

If he was charged with a violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:33-15 “Possession, consumption of alcoholic beverages by persons under legal age” he could be found guilty of a disorderly persons offense. A disorderly persons offense is not a “crime” it is an “offense”, but it may be a distinction without merit to you because both will remain on his record now that he is an “adult” (18 and over). Moreover, the penalties for a violation of that statute are severe (fine of not less than $500 and a loss of license for six months). In some other municipalities, like Morris Township, for example, , there are local ordinances that may also be charged in addition to N.J.S.A. 2C:33-15. An ordinance is a local municipality’s law, the punishment for which is normally just a fine with no possibility for jail; it is neither a “crime” nor “offense” and may not affect his permanent record.

Bottom line here is that although a couple of years ago the reaction to kids with alcohol in a car may have been “oh it’s just kids being kids,” being charged with N.J.S.A. 2C:33-15 is serious business. He needs an attorney, immediately. A good attorney will be able to determine whether your son had any knowledge that the alcohol was in the car, whether he actually or constructively possessed it, and, whether, the local municipality has a local ordinance that the more serious charge can be pleaded to.

Matheu D. Nunn, Esq.

“Ask the Attorney” is a blog in which answers to your legal questions submitted to asktheattorney@einhornharris.com may be answered. The answers to the questions are posted every Thursday and are for informational purposes only and are not to be construed as legal advice or the creation of an attorney-client relationship. The facts of each case is different, therefore you should seek competent legal representation.

clyde donovan

3:55 pm on Friday, August 17, 2012

Get your son into an alcohol education program before he dies in a DUI crash or kills someone else while drunk and spends most of the rest of his life behind bars. Drug and alcohol abuse for your son is only going to get worse when he goes to college.You'd better get a handle on this or else your son will be headed down a dark road.

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Not Again!

10:03 am on Monday, August 20, 2012

Very extreme indeed. To me, it looks to me like the only dark road is in your imagination. The Police are enforcing the law – simple. But it amazes me that we can ask and allow people to die for our country, but they can’t have a beer. And that these kids will have to expose this in a background check for the rest of their lives.

When these kids parents were 18, we could drink in bars, or at worst we were just kids being kids. And how many of those parents went down the “dark road” of substance abuse and are behind bars? Really get a grip on reality. DUI is a very serious matter, but these kids were not DUI.

The world is going crazy with over-regulation.

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12345678

12:09 pm on Monday, August 20, 2012

Not Again!, I agree. It's going to make criminal background checks a joke.

Sir

4:59 pm on Friday, August 17, 2012

Tabor - a bit extreme, don't you think?

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Andie

6:32 am on Saturday, August 18, 2012

May not be extreme. Birds of a feather, right.

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clyde donovan

12:56 pm on Monday, August 20, 2012

Treating drunk young adults like preschoolers sounds like a rational policy. I hope one of these intoxicated teens don't kill you and your family on the highway.

It seems that when the government tried the 18 drinking age, it was a huge failure.

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Team Casper

12:40 pm on Tuesday, August 21, 2012

I think they are actually saying treat them like adults. If you are going to prosecute them as adults should not you give them the liberties as well?

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FourScore

4:26 pm on Tuesday, August 21, 2012

And I'm sure Tabor that you didn't touch a drop of alcohol until you were of legal drinking age.... right???

Tom

12:06 pm on Tuesday, August 21, 2012

"A good attorney will be able to determine whether your son had any knowledge that the alcohol was in the car, whether he actually or constructively possessed it, and, whether, the local municipality has a local ordinance that the more serious charge can be pleaded to."

Hard to miss a case sitting in the back seat...

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twp4ever

4:12 pm on Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Did Tabor read that no one was ticked for being drunk, or even having been drinking? It appears that it was a possession only charge.

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