2000Easyguy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2007
- Posts
- 204
Babbitt’s attorney said an initial breathalyzer test showed his client’s blood alcohol level was below the legal limit. A prosecutor maintained that subsequent tests yielded different results, but the case was dismissed before evidence could be presented.
http://www.aopa.org/aircraft/articl...sed.html?WT.mc_id=120511epilot&WT.mc_sect=gan
It sounds to me like the cops went for multiple mulligans on the test until they got the result they wanted. How accurate is a breathalyzer? Apparantly not as accurate as we're led to believe.
Why'd he resign? Because he was likely under intense pressure to resign. After all, if you're arrested, you're guilty. There's no such thing in the American mindset of a false arrest. Just look at the comments on this thread.
Fair enough, but I call it BS......
Quote from linked article:
Former FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt told reporters he bears no ill will against the police officer who arrested him for driving while intoxicated in December, after a Fairfax, Va., judge ruled May 10 that the traffic stop was made on a “mere hunch,” and without just cause.
If any one of "us" were in his shoes, wouldn't you be sitting in your attorneys office discussing this issue?