Field Sobriety Test Defense in Illinois

Field sobriety tests are the most subjective evidence in any DUI case. Officers grade them. Officers interpret them. And officers get them wrong — far more often than you'd think.

Field Sobriety Tests Are Not the Science Police Claim They Are

You were standing on the side of the road — maybe it was dark, maybe it was cold, maybe cars were flying past at 50 miles an hour. A police officer asked you to follow a pen with your eyes, walk a straight line heel-to-toe, and balance on one foot for 30 seconds. You were nervous. You were scared. And the officer decided you "failed."

Here's what the officer probably didn't tell you: field sobriety tests are completely voluntary in Illinois. There is no law requiring you to perform them, no penalty for refusing, and no implied consent consequences like there are for chemical testing. These roadside exercises exist for one purpose — to give the officer evidence to justify arresting you.

Our attorneys are former prosecutors who relied on field sobriety test evidence to convict DUI defendants. We know exactly how prosecutors present this evidence, what they emphasize, and what they try to hide. Now we use that same knowledge to tear apart FST evidence and defend our clients in Lake County and throughout northern Illinois.

Understanding the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) recognizes only three standardized field sobriety tests. Each has specific protocols — and specific weaknesses a skilled defense attorney can exploit.

Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN)

The officer moves a stimulus (pen or finger) across your field of vision and watches for involuntary jerking of the eyes. The officer looks for three "clues" in each eye: lack of smooth pursuit, distinct nystagmus at maximum deviation, and onset of nystagmus before 45 degrees. Four or more clues out of six is considered a "fail."

Accuracy claim: NHTSA says 77% — meaning 23% of sober people fail.

Walk-and-Turn (WAT)

You must take nine heel-to-toe steps along a straight line, turn on one foot, and take nine heel-to-toe steps back. The officer watches for eight clues: can't balance during instructions, starts too soon, stops while walking, doesn't touch heel-to-toe, steps off line, uses arms for balance, wrong number of steps, and improper turn.

Accuracy claim: NHTSA says 68% — meaning nearly 1 in 3 sober people fail.

One-Leg Stand (OLS)

You must stand on one foot with the other foot raised approximately six inches off the ground while counting "one thousand one, one thousand two..." for 30 seconds. The officer watches for four clues: swaying, using arms for balance, hopping, and putting the foot down.

Accuracy claim: NHTSA says 65% — meaning 35% of sober people fail.

Non-Standardized Tests

Some officers administer additional tests — finger-to-nose, alphabet recitation, counting backwards, or the Romberg balance test. These tests have no validated scientific basis and have not been approved by NHTSA. Their results carry little weight in court when challenged by an experienced attorney.

How We Attack Field Sobriety Test Evidence

As former prosecutors, we know how the state builds its case around FST evidence — and we know exactly where it falls apart.

Protocol Violations

NHTSA publishes a detailed manual that officers must follow precisely. The HGN stimulus must be held 12-15 inches from the subject's face. Each pass must take a specific number of seconds. The walk-and-turn line must be on a hard, flat, well-lit surface. We compare the officer's actions against the manual, step by step. Even small deviations can invalidate the results entirely.

Environmental Conditions

Were you tested on a gravel shoulder? A sloped road? In the rain, wind, or cold? Under the blinding glare of police flashers? NHTSA's own manual states that tests should be conducted on a "reasonably dry, hard, level, non-slippery surface." Lake County roads in winter rarely meet that standard — and we'll make sure the judge knows it.

Medical & Physical Factors

Inner ear conditions, back injuries, knee replacements, obesity, neurological disorders, diabetes, and even age over 65 can all produce FST "failures" that have nothing to do with alcohol. Nystagmus can be caused by medications, brain injuries, or conditions the person was born with. We identify every medical factor and present it through documentation or expert testimony.

Body Camera & Dashcam Review

The officer's report says you "stumbled" and "couldn't maintain balance." But what does the video show? We meticulously review every second of available footage, comparing the officer's written observations against what actually happened. Time and again, we find that the video tells a very different story than the police report.

Why NHTSA's Own Research Undermines Field Sobriety Tests

Law enforcement touts field sobriety tests as "scientifically validated." But a closer look at the research reveals significant problems that any competent defense attorney should expose.

The Original Studies Were Flawed

The validation studies conducted in the late 1970s and 1990s were performed under ideal laboratory conditions — flat indoor surfaces, perfect lighting, no traffic noise, no stress, and trained research subjects who knew they were being studied. Real-world roadside conditions bear no resemblance to these controlled environments. Despite this, the "accuracy" percentages from those studies are still cited as gospel.

The Combined Accuracy Problem

Even under ideal conditions, NHTSA's own research shows that all three standardized tests combined produce a correct classification only about 82% of the time. That means if every officer in Lake County administered these tests perfectly — which they don't — roughly 1 in 5 sober drivers would be incorrectly classified as impaired. In a county that processes thousands of DUI stops annually, that's hundreds of innocent people.

Officer Training Is Often Inadequate

Illinois police officers receive NHTSA-standardized training in field sobriety testing, but the quality varies dramatically. Some officers receive a full 40-hour DWI Detection course. Others receive abbreviated training or haven't refreshed their certification in years. We routinely request officers' training records and certifications — and what we find often reveals significant gaps between what they were taught and what they actually did during your traffic stop.

Important: You do NOT have to accept a "failed" field sobriety test as the end of your case. These tests are deeply subjective and frequently challenged successfully. Call 847-520-4810 for a free analysis of the FST evidence in your case.

Factors That Cause Sober People to Fail Field Sobriety Tests

Footwear & Clothing

High heels, boots, sandals, work shoes with thick soles, and dress shoes all significantly impair balance performance. NHTSA guidelines say subjects should be given the option to remove their shoes — but many officers skip this step. Tight clothing, heavy jackets, and even belt-mounted items can restrict movement.

Anxiety & Nervousness

Being pulled over by police — especially at night — triggers the body's fight-or-flight response. Adrenaline causes shaking, impaired coordination, difficulty concentrating, and rapid eye movement. Officers interpret these stress responses as signs of impairment, but they are perfectly natural reactions to a high-stress encounter with law enforcement.

Age & Physical Condition

NHTSA's own manual acknowledges that people over 65 or more than 50 pounds overweight should not be evaluated using the walk-and-turn or one-leg stand tests. Yet officers routinely administer these tests to elderly and overweight individuals and mark their natural physical limitations as "clues" of intoxication.

Fatigue & Distraction

Working a late shift? Driving home after a long day? Fatigue affects balance, concentration, and eye tracking in ways that mimic alcohol impairment. Add the distraction of passing traffic, flashing police lights, and the stress of the situation, and even a stone-cold sober person can "fail" these arbitrary roadside exercises.

Field Sobriety Test Questions Answered

No. Field sobriety tests are completely voluntary in Illinois. Unlike chemical testing (breath or blood), there is no implied consent law requiring you to perform field sobriety tests. You can politely decline without any automatic penalty to your driver's license. However, the officer may still arrest you based on other observations.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) own research, the three standardized tests have significant error rates even when administered perfectly. The Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus test is approximately 77% accurate, the Walk-and-Turn test is approximately 68% accurate, and the One-Leg Stand test is approximately 65% accurate. When all three are combined, accuracy reaches only about 82% — meaning nearly 1 in 5 sober people would be classified as impaired.

Numerous medical conditions can cause poor performance on field sobriety tests unrelated to alcohol consumption. These include inner ear disorders, neurological conditions, back and leg injuries, knee or hip problems, obesity, eye conditions (such as nystagmus from non-alcohol causes), diabetes, anxiety disorders, and age-related balance issues. Even prescription medications can affect balance and eye tracking.

Absolutely. Field sobriety test results are challenged successfully in Illinois courts regularly. Common challenges include improper administration by the officer, failure to follow NHTSA protocols, environmental factors (poor lighting, uneven surfaces, bad weather), the defendant's medical conditions, improper footwear, and the officer's subjective interpretation of the results. An experienced DUI attorney can expose these flaws through cross-examination and expert testimony.

If you failed field sobriety tests but had a BAC below 0.08, the prosecution faces a much harder case. However, you can still be charged with DUI under Illinois law if the state argues you were impaired to the point you could not drive safely, regardless of your BAC. An experienced defense attorney can use the passing breathalyzer result to powerfully undermine the field sobriety test observations.

While hindsight is 20/20, refusing field sobriety tests is generally advisable because they are voluntary and primarily serve to build evidence against you. Unlike refusing a breathalyzer, there is no automatic license suspension for declining field sobriety tests in Illinois. However, if you already took them, all is not lost — a skilled DUI attorney can challenge how the tests were administered and interpreted.

"Failed" a Field Sobriety Test? Don't Plead Guilty.

The officer's opinion is not a conviction. Former prosecutors on the Stavros Brothers team challenge FST evidence every day in Lake County courts. Free consultation. Payment plans available. ¡Se habla español!

Call 847-520-4810 Now

Related Practice Areas

Field sobriety tests are just one piece of the DUI evidence puzzle. Learn more about challenging breathalyzer results, understanding the complete DUI court process, or what happens in refusal cases when you decline chemical testing. If this is your first offense, see our first-time DUI page for information about court supervision.

A DUI arrest can sometimes lead to additional charges. Our firm also handles criminal defense cases across Illinois, including reckless driving and drug-related offenses. See our DUI dismissed through evidence suppression case result.

We defend DUI cases throughout Lake County, including Waukegan, Highland Park, Libertyville, Lake Zurich, and Gurnee.