For DUI Lawyers
March 18th, 2010 Filed Under Uncategorized
Standardized Field Sobriety Testing Certification Student Course (NHTSA Course)
April 30, May 1 & 2, 2010
Presented by Lance Platt, Ph.D. and Valdez Malcolm PLLC
This training course will certify the attendee in the most current NHTSA approved SFST training curriculum. This is the same NHTSA SFST training course that law enforcement officers are trained in nationwide and testify to in court. The course is open to any student who wants to learn more about the NHTSA approved standardized field sobriety testing and its foundation.
This course will train the legal professional in: Perspectives on recognizing driving behavior exhibited by impaired drivers; Attitudes and skills in detecting the impaired driver; Understanding the tasks and decisions involved in identifying the intoxicated driver; The DWI detection process (vehicle in motion, personal contact, pre-arrest screening); Effects of DWI enforcement; DWI enforcement and the three standardized field sobriety tests (Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus, Walk and Turn, and One Leg Stand); Typical clues of alcohol intoxication; Divided attention testing and the NHTSA standardized field sobriety testing administrative and scoring protocols; SFST validation studies; Live alcohol workshop and demonstrations of different types of nystagmus will be displayed and observed.
If you would like to attend this invaluable training course please contact Diane Klebenow to register. 979-846-3950 or diane@plattandassoicates.org
This seminar fills up quickly and space is limited! Please contact Karlie Valdez with questions. 206-718-4498 or karlie@valdezmalcolm.com
The Westin Bellevue
600 Bellevue Way N.E.
Bellevue, WA 98004 Cost: $750.00 per student / $500.00 for public defenders
Course Includes:
Current NHTSA SFST student manual (hardcopy) CD containing all past NHTSA SFST manuals and complete SFST validation studies
This course is not offered in Washington every year so DO NOT MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY!
Post Linx
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment