Motor Vehicle Violations

WHERE DO YOU SEND RECORDS?

Dr. Kirk has offices in Denver and Las Vegas. Denver is the main clinic and Las Vegas is a satellite location. All records should be sent to:

Aviation Psychiatry, LLC
Gregory L. Kirk, MD
2036 East 17th Avenue
Denver, Colorado, 80206

or by email to

gregkirk@avipsy-secure.org

Records needed for an Alcohol or Drug Driving Case

Your aviation psychiatrist will need to see the officer’s evidence from the traffic stop. There are usually three components to the  evidence.

The first is a plain-language summary of what the officer observed during the stop. Depending on the jurisdiction, this may be called a WARRANTLESS ARREST AFFIDAVIT, AFFIDAVIT OF PROBABLE CAUSE, or OFFICER’S NARRATIVE STATEMENT.

The second piece of evidence is the officer’s record about how one performed on the Field Sobriety Tests. This form is usually called DUI FIELD NOTES or something similar to that.

Finally, the aviation psychiatrist will want to see the laboratory evidence, for example a breathalyzer or a serum (blood) alcohol test.

The narrative statement, DUI field notes, and chemical analysis results are almost always available through the police, state patrol, or sheriff’s office that originally gathered the evidence.  You can also usually get these records from your lawyer, if you had one. If the case occurred several years ago, it is possible that the files have been purged.

If your case is old and the case reports have been purged, most jurisdictions will produce a form letter saying that the files you requested are no longer available. You should ask for this and present with your case showing that you at least tried to get the files.

Law enforcement will not release records to your doctor so it’s okay to have the files come directly to you.

What else?

You can be sure that most every case will require these records above. Other records that you may want to go ahead and start securing would be certificates of completion of probation, copies of any post-arrest drug testing results, statement of community service completion, names and address of probation officers, and names and address of court-ordered education and group therapy classes.

Why is it necessary for an aviation psychiatrist to review a lot of records?

An aviation psychiatric examination is different than a clinical mental health evaluation. Aviation psychiatric examinations are designed to answer a specific question:  does the aviator’s situation allow a medical certificate under the FARs?

Legal problems that lead to scrutiny of aviation certification can include:

  • a high BAC alcohol-related driving incident
  • a series of lower-level alcohol-related driving incidents
  • a DUI with a BAC or blood test refusal
  • a drug-related criminal charge of any kind

Investigation of the record and sources is just as important as the in-office interview, so the psychiatrist relies on three equally important sets of information.  The elements are:

  • the psychiatric interview in an aviation psychiatrist’s office
  • a review of the pertinent legal record and FAA medical file
  • interview of collateral sources of information (spouses, employers, aviation peers, or some other source verification)

An evaluation will fail FAA scrutiny if the psychiatrist relies on the psychiatric interview alone.

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