DUI & OWI Defense Lawyer in Manitowoc, WI

DUI & OWI Defense Lawyer in Manitowoc, WI

An OWI arrest in Manitowoc starts two clocks at the same time. One runs on your driver’s license: whether you refused the test or failed it, you generally have just 10 days from your notice to request a hearing or review — otherwise the license consequence takes effect on its own, roughly 30 days after the notice is issued (a suspension if you failed the evidentiary test, a revocation if you refused it). The other runs on your case in court. Mays Law Office defends OWI charges — the offense most people search as DUI or DWI; Wisconsin’s statutory charge is OWI — along with drugged-driving allegations, throughout Manitowoc and Manitowoc County. We work from our Middleton office and appear where Manitowoc cases are decided, including the Manitowoc County Circuit Court on South 8th Street. Call 608-305-4518 for a free consultation before you say anything to anyone else about your arrest.

OWI Attorneys in Manitowoc, WI

Attorney Stephen E. Mays has practiced law in Wisconsin since 1995 and defends OWI and drunk-driving charges across the state. He has won OWI cases at the municipal, circuit, appellate, and Wisconsin Supreme Court levels, a former member of the National College for DUI Defense, and was an original member of the Drunk Driving Roundtable. Before he built a defense practice, he worked in the Dane County District Attorney’s office — so he has seen how these cases are charged from the inside. Manitowoc sits on the Lake Michigan shoreline as an old industrial and shipbuilding city, and like anywhere else, an OWI stop here can come from city police, the county sheriff, or the state patrol. Knowing which agency made the stop, and where the charge will land, shapes the defense from day one.

An OWI lawyer earns the fee in the specifics — whether the stop was lawful, whether the field sobriety tests actually show what the officer claims, whether the blood draw held up under the Fourth Amendment, and whether every deadline that protects your license was met. Those are the questions a case needs answered from the start, and we begin working them at the first call.

When to Call Our Manitowoc, WI OWI Lawyers

Reach out right away if any of this fits your situation:

  • You were handed a “Notice of Intent to Revoke” after refusing a breath or blood test. You have 10 days to request a refusal hearing in writing — let that window close and the revocation runs on its own, and you forfeit the statutory chance to contest it.
  • You took the test and the result was over the limit. That triggers a Notice of Intent to Suspend, and you have 10 days to request administrative review — otherwise a 6-month administrative suspension takes effect 30 days after the notice is issued.
  • You already have an OWI on your record. A second offense is a criminal misdemeanor carrying 5 days to 6 months in jail if the prior was within the last 10 years. A third runs 45 days to a year. A fourth is a Class H felony.
  • A child under 16 was riding with you. That one fact turns even a first offense into a criminal misdemeanor — a $350 to $1,100 fine and a mandatory 5 days to 6 months in jail.
  • Someone was hurt. Causing injury to another person while intoxicated makes even a first offense a crime, and great bodily harm or death brings separate felony charges.
  • You hold a CDL. A single OWI conviction — even in your own car — disqualifies your commercial privileges for a year, and a second lifetime conviction ends them for good.
  • You were at 0.15 or above. On a first offense, that reading brings a mandatory one-year ignition interlock order.

What an OWI Conviction Costs in Wisconsin

What actually happens if you’re convicted of OWI in Wisconsin? (And yes — if you searched “DUI” or “DWI,” this is your answer; Wisconsin’s statute calls the offense OWI, whichever name you typed.) It depends on which offense number this is. First time, with no aggravating facts? You’re facing a civil forfeiture — $150 to $300 plus the $435 mandatory surcharge — a 6-to-9-month license revocation, and no jail. Second time? If the prior was within 10 years, it’s now a crime, with 5 days to 6 months in jail. Third? 45 days to a year — and from the third offense onward, every prior you’ve ever had counts, with no time limit. Fourth? That’s a Class H felony: 60 days to 6 years of imprisonment. Was a child under 16 riding with you? Then even a first offense is a criminal misdemeanor — a $350–$1,100 fine plus mandatory jail of 5 days to 6 months. Will you need an ignition interlock? Only in defined situations: a refusal, a first offense at a BAC of 0.15 or higher, or a repeat offense. Can you keep driving to work? Possibly, on an occupational license — but don’t assume it; eligibility turns on your suspension type, any interlock requirement, the rest of your record, and DMV sign-off. And how long do you have to act? Ten days — to request a refusal hearing if you declined the test, or administrative review if you failed the evidentiary chemical test.

The fine printed on the citation is the smallest number in an OWI case. Every OWI conviction carries a mandatory $435 surcharge. The required alcohol and drug assessment typically costs $165 to $500. If the court orders an ignition interlock, expect around $50 to $150 to install it and $60 to $100 per month to keep it running. Reinstating your license adds another $200. Then SR-22 high-risk insurance inflates your premiums for years. Where does that leave a typical first offense? Somewhere between $4,000 and beyond $10,000 all told — and those are typical ranges that shift with your county, your vendor, and your insurer.

How OWI Cases Move Through Manitowoc and Manitowoc County Courts

Where a Manitowoc OWI is heard depends on how it is charged. A standard first offense is not a crime in Wisconsin — it is a civil forfeiture — so, depending on which agency wrote the citation, it may be handled either in the Manitowoc County Circuit Court or in a local municipal court that hears non-criminal ordinance matters. Either way, it stays a civil matter rather than a criminal one, which shapes both the process and what is at stake.

Every criminal OWI — a repeat offense, or a first offense involving a minor passenger or injury — is filed in the Manitowoc County Circuit Court, the state trial court of general jurisdiction, at the county courthouse at 1010 South 8th Street in Manitowoc. Manitowoc County is the county seat’s home county and runs four circuit court branches to handle its caseload. Criminal charges here are prosecuted by the county District Attorney’s office, and as a general rule a criminal case is tried in the county where the offense occurred. An OWI stop in Manitowoc may come from city officers, the county sheriff’s department, or a state trooper — which agency stopped you can affect the reports, the video, and how the case is built, which is one of the first things our Wisconsin OWI defense practice sorts out.

The criminal track follows a set path. The arresting agency forwards its file to the District Attorney, who issues a criminal complaint; you make an initial appearance; contested issues get litigated at motion hearings; and if a pretrial conference produces no resolution, the case goes to trial, where the State must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

How We Defend OWI Charges

Is there any point in fighting an OWI charge? Often, yes — because the State’s case has to survive five separate questions. Was the stop legal? Police need reasonable suspicion before pulling you over and probable cause before arresting you; a defect in either can suppress what followed. Do the field tests prove impairment? Not reliably — the standardized battery was validated on limited populations, and medical conditions, age, weight, injuries, weather, and footwear routinely mimic intoxication in sober people. Is the breath result airtight? A reading near the applicable limit — 0.08 for most drivers — is worth pressing: the reliability of chemical testing is a recognized battleground, and once you take the agency’s primary test, you’re entitled to its alternative test free of charge — or a test of your own choosing at your own expense. Was the blood draw constitutional? Taking blood is a Fourth Amendment search, and after State v. Prado (2021) — which struck down the presumption that an incapacitated driver consents — a warrantless draw without valid consent faces genuine challenge (though the State can invoke exceptions like exigent circumstances, so the analysis is fact-specific). Did you even “operate” the vehicle? Wisconsin defines operation as physically manipulating or activating the controls needed to put the car in motion, and whether that happened is a factual question the State must prove. None of these defenses is guaranteed to win, and not all of them will apply to you. The point of a case review is finding out which ones do. That review is free — call 608-305-4518 before those details go cold.

We also handle the license side of the case — refusal hearings and occupational license applications. An occupational license is not automatic; eligibility depends on the type of suspension, any interlock requirement, other suspensions on your record, and DMV approval, so the paperwork is worth getting right the first time.

Manitowoc OWI Questions We Hear Most

Will I go to jail for a first-offense OWI in Wisconsin?

For a standard first offense, no. Wisconsin is the only state that treats a first OWI as a non-criminal civil forfeiture — a fine and license revocation, but no jail. That changes fast if a child under 16 was in the car — a criminal misdemeanor with a mandatory 5 days to 6 months in jail — or if anyone else was injured, which also criminalizes the charge.

Where will my Manitowoc OWI case actually be heard?

That depends on the charge. A standard first offense is a civil matter, not a crime, and may be handled either in the Manitowoc County Circuit Court or in a local municipal court, depending on which agency issued the citation. Any criminal OWI — a repeat offense, or a first offense with a minor passenger or injury — is filed in the Manitowoc County Circuit Court at 1010 South 8th Street in Manitowoc and prosecuted by the county District Attorney. Manitowoc is the county seat, and the county runs four circuit court branches to move its docket.

Can I still drive to work?

Often, yes — but it is not automatic. An occupational license permits up to 12 hours of driving per day and 60 hours per week for work, school, medical appointments, treatment, and essential household duties — never recreation. Eligibility depends on the type of suspension or revocation, any interlock requirement, other suspensions on your record, and DMV approval — and the timing rules differ by situation, so we confirm your exact eligibility window before filing. The application runs through WisDOT paperwork, an SR-22 filing from your insurer, and proof of interlock installation where ordered — we can help prepare and review the application and supporting filings.

Can I get an OWI expunged later?

No. Wisconsin’s expungement statute excludes OWI convictions entirely, and the civil first offense stays on your WisDOT driving record permanently — and once you reach a third offense, every prior counts, no matter how old.

Is refusing the test better than failing it?

They are two different problems, not a loophole and a trap. Refusal is a stand-alone violation: a first refusal brings a 1-year license revocation, a mandatory alcohol assessment, and a mandatory 1-year ignition interlock — and the refusal itself can be used as evidence against you in the OWI case. Failing the evidentiary chemical test — the breath, blood, or urine test after arrest, not the roadside preliminary breath test — instead triggers a 6-month administrative suspension. Either way, the clock is the same: 10 days to request a refusal hearing or administrative review, or the license consequence takes effect on its own 30 days after the notice is issued. Which situation you are in changes the strategy — it does not change the urgency.

Get a Free Consultation

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Whether this is a civil first offense or a felony repeat charge, the days right after a Manitowoc OWI arrest are the ones that matter most. Call 608-305-4518 or contact Mays Law Office online for a free consultation. Mays Law Office, LLC — 6405 Century Ave STE 103, Middleton, WI 53562.

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Whether you need a trusted, competent criminal defense lawyer or OWI defense lawyer to take your criminal or DUI case and defend you, or you need a knowledgeable workers' compensation lawyer to handle your claim, we have the experience, the knowledge, and the compassion to find the right solution for you.

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