The court process for Temecula DUI cases
Temecula DUI cases are filed with the Riverside County Superior Court. They are heard at the Southwest Justice Center at 30755-D Auld Road in Murrieta, which serves southwest Riverside County. Temecula is in Riverside County, so cases are prosecuted by the Riverside County District Attorney's Office under the same county-wide charging and offer policies that apply across the county.
For a full overview of how cases move through this court system, see the Riverside County DUI defense guide.
The DMV 10-day hearing deadline
The DMV handles the suspension of your driving privilege through an Administrative Per Se action that runs entirely separate from the criminal case. Under California Vehicle Code Section 13558 you have ten calendar days from the arrest date to request the hearing, or the license is suspended automatically. Most hearings are now held by phone or video, and in most cases your attorney appears for you.
You have 10 calendar days from your arrest date to request an APS hearing. Missing this deadline means automatic license suspension beginning 30 days after arrest. Request the hearing through the DMV Driver Safety unit, or have an attorney request it on your behalf, to preserve your driving privilege while the case is pending.
Temecula Police and CHP DUI enforcement
Temecula contracts its policing to the Riverside County Sheriff's Office, whose Temecula station runs heavy DUI enforcement around Old Town Temecula, the Temecula Valley wine country along Rancho California Road and De Portola Road, and the Promenade mall area, with frequent checkpoints and saturation patrols. The California Highway Patrol covers Interstate 15, the main route through the valley.
How Riverside County prosecutes DUI cases
The Riverside County District Attorney's Office prosecutes Temecula DUI cases. A typical first offense with no aggravating facts resolves with three years of summary (informal) probation, a first-offender DUI program, fines and assessments that commonly total $2,000 to $3,500, and a license suspension. Where the stop, the investigation, or the chemical test has a real weakness, a reduction to a wet reckless under Vehicle Code Section 23103.5, or in some cases a dismissal, becomes realistic. Aggravating facts such as a high BAC, a refusal, an accident, or a prior conviction raise the exposure and change the strategy.
What to do after a Temecula DUI arrest
Request the DMV hearing within ten days. Find your arraignment date and courthouse on the citation, and retain DUI counsel before that date so the case is handled correctly from the start. Write down everything you remember about the stop, the field sobriety tests, and the breath or blood test while it is fresh, and preserve receipts, texts, and any video. Temecula wine country arrests often turn on the timing between tasting-room visits and the test, so preserve any winery receipts, reservations, and rideshare records.