Great timing Nougat!
I pled guilty in court Wed. morning and am now revoked for 5 years (or more), since you have to jump through insane hoops and pay outrageous sums to ever get licensed again. The judge took great care to explain that he could have sentenced me to a year in prison or jail, but gave me a year of probation. He made clear that if I screw up in any way he can revoke my probation, send me to prison or jail and fine me thousands more. I must remove my firearms from my house, I cannot step foot in a bar even for a can of Coke, I cannot cook with wine in my home, or allow alcohol in my home for other family members.
So it is a major deal. I can't just build what I want and plead ignorance. Ignorance of the law is not a defense. I have a feeling the answer is going to be 'no', as my attorney insists. He keeps reminding me that people have been arrested on riding mowers. Of course those are drunk people. I quit drinking in public at the time of my arrest, and now I won't even have the once a week home drink I allowed myself. They can come by anytime for random drug testing, so I am clean of all and will remain so.
What I do not understand in my rational thinking is how the DUI would come up in the conversation if the Officer understands the statute as I think it is written.
Public Act: 96-0125 Senate Bill: 0236
Synopsis:
Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Defines a low-speed electric bicycle as a 2 or 3-wheeled device with fully operable pedals and an electric motor of less than 750 watts (one horsepower), whose maximum speed on a paved level surface, when powered solely by such a motor while ridden by an operator who weighs 170 pounds, is less than 20 miles per hour.
Excludes low-speed electric bicycles from the definition of "motor vehicle". Prohibits operation of a low-speed electric bicycle at a speed greater than 20 miles per hour upon any highway, street, or roadway. Prohibits operation of a low-speed electric bicycle on a sidewalk. Provides that, except as otherwise provided, the provisions of the Article of the Code dealing with bicycles also apply to low-speed electric bicycles.
Adds a definition for a "low-speed gas bicycle" and treats a low-speed gas bicycle the same as a low-speed electric bicycle in a provision regulating the use of low-speed bicycles and a provision excluding low-speed bicycles from the definition of a motor vehicle. Removes the requirement that a person have a valid current Illinois driver's license to operate an electric bicycle.
When I read the teaching material provided for the Police I see two essential statemments.
1: Excludes low-speed electric and gas bicycles from the definition of "motor vehicle".
2: Removes the requirement for a driver's license.
So what is not clear or just (in my mind) is how the State can say in writing that the motor assisted bicycle IS NOT A MOTOR VEHICLE, but tell me it is a motor vehicle if I am operating it because I have a DUI. They get to have it both ways because they make the rules.
Thanks for your help, I look forward to your updates. If you think it would be clarifying for them, please write them one more time and bring up what I just quoted, that is: By the State's definition it is not a motorized vehicle.
Thanks.