Got a DUI in nursing school & NCLEX

Nurses Criminal

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Hello to all registered users on allnurses.com and to those who are frantically searching for anyone facing a similar situation or know a friend who has gotten a DUI in nursing school.

I was in my 2nd semester in nursing school and was out celebrating a classmate's birthday at a local bowling alley/lounge. I drove and my friend was in the passenger seat accompanying me to the destination. When I first got there I had one mixed drink with my friend. We arrived about an hour before the birthday girl got there so I figured why not drink just one. Then it turned into another one. And then another shot of whisky (i think). This happened in 2014. On Thanks Giving morning at 2am I drove home and was pulled over for driving too close to a Highway Patrol vehicle that had already stopped a motorcycle on the side of the road. I was honest to the police officer and admitted right away that I had a couple of drinks before I drove. That night I was arrested for a DUI.

Did I get a laywer? YES. How much did it cost? 2k. Was he worth it? YES. In the county I live in, a DUI fine can range from $10,000 at the max to $4,000 at the minimum. Yes 4k, minimum. My lawyer helped cut me a deal with the judge. In lieu of jail time I was on electronic monitoring for 21 days and YES THAT WAS WHILE I WAS IN NURSING SCHOOL. I went through a LOT. I had to get rides EVERYWHERE including work and clinical. I lost my drivers license for a month. I am on probation for 3 years. With a BAC of .11 my lawyer was able to convince the judge that I was not drunk while driving, considering the subpoenaed dash-cam video as I stepped out of my vehicle to begin the field sobriety tests. I was convicted of driving while under the influence of a BAC of .08 or greater. (Technically not a DUI but in the same area).

Did I ever cry about it? Yes, absolutely. I completely understood the consequences and took full responsibility for my actions. Did I become depressed? No. Stay strong. This is literally not the end of the world. That's exactly what the cop told me haha! And he was right. Am I sorry for what I did? YES from the bottom of my HEART YES I AM SORRY FOR WHAT I DID. I thank God that no one was hurt. I vowed never drink and drive again.

Did I tell my school about it? No.. Nothing in the student handbook required me to disclose that information while in the program. Was I scared? Yes! I could not afford to fail out of nursing school so I literally had a fire lit under me the whole time in nursing school knowing I had to step my game up and could not make any mistakes under any circumstances.

Naturally, I searched all over Google on possible ramifications of my DUI arrest. I wondered if my career ended right then and there and contemplated if I should finish nursing school because of what happened. There are other registered nurses out there who have DUI's on their background prior to becoming a nurse. Just keep that in mind.

Here I am, March 2016, three months later after graduating nursing school and after applying to take my NCLEX. I just received my ATT via email. Please remember, every case is different and the board reviews every application as an individual. Not every case is the same. Disclose everything. Have ALL your documents ready when you submit your application. You'll regret not submitting everything as it prolongs the application process by MONTHS.

I am not lucky. I am an individual who made a mistake and learned from it. Don't let anyone bring you down. I wanted to write this for those who are feeling hopeless and are searching for answers. I can't answer all your questions but I am willing to try.

Cheers...

(AND DON'T DO IT AGAIN!)

Specializes in none.

Hello Kimzor, congratulations on getting your unrestricted license from the California BON! I don't suppose that you would send out your letter of explanation? I am confounded on what to include in my letter that I feel that I am overthinking it..

TXagg: Yes, my school requires it before you can accept a. Seat in the nursing program because TX is behind and can take 6-24 months. So I did it and basically got the okay to take the NCLEX. Once passed my license will have no stipulations.

That's awesome!! Congrats!! sorry if I sound like a broken record, but did they initially deny you or did you just apply and they gave you ATT.. Did you send anything to increase your chance like reference letters, community service, psych evaluation?? Just trying to get my cards lined up!! Thanks!!

Thank you! I sent everything that was needed in a single package to the Ca BRN, neglecting to send everything needed the first time prolongs the whole process.

This is the list of things I sent:

Letter of Explanation - in full detail including the exact offenses I was charged for and what I pled guilty to.

Current job work eval - this showed that I was in good standing at my job and how it had no effect on my work ethic

Letters of Rec - from school instructors, current employer, and RN, and the sheriff that dealt with my case

Official documents of case - from the court and from the highway patrol (will cost u $$ to get)

Dash Cam Videos of the incident - has to be subpoenaed from lawyer

My actual receipt of my BAC at time of incident

A letter of completion of my DUI diversion program - 0 absences

A form of the AA meetings I attended

A letter containing my hours of community service I have done previously to the incident (300+ hours)

I did speak with a psychologist at my school of the incident that occurred. Although he told me he couldnt provide me with a psych eval (which later I found was not mandatory to send) I felt better speaking with a professional about it in confidence. You would have to pay for one which could cost $500+ and you need to be evaluated over a period of time.

With all these items sent I received my ATT right away (90 days from when the BRN processed my application). 90 days is about the normal wait for someone with no criminal background history.

Hello Kimzor, congratulations on getting your unrestricted license from the California BON! I don't suppose that you would send out your letter of explanation? I am confounded on what to include in my letter that I feel that I am overthinking it..

Be very thorough in your letter and go into full detail. Also be very sincere in your letter and show the BRN that you have learned from your mistake and it has not deterred you from your goals.

Hi everyone, just wanted to give an update. I am a full-fledge working nurse on a telemetry unit. Please don't be discouraged from continuing nursing. If I was able to make it, you can too. Be safe and be smart. Take care everyone. I am open for questions (:

Congrats! i too recently graduated.

As long you send in the appropriate documentation to the BON and really seem genuine when explain your individual case in your "letter of explanation," you will be fine. Noone on these boards can tell you what is going to happen to you specifically. We are humans and we do things accidentally. I doubt anyone on here drank and drove with cruel intentions. Be patient and kind with yourself. DO NOT STOP WORKING HARD, things will pay off and all that crying of sadness all turn into cries of happiness and relief :) good luck!!

How recent were your DUI's if you don't mind me asking, also how high did you blow??

Im so happy for you!!

-Thanks a million

So you were able to successfully apply to get your license and take your nclex while being on probation ?

@Ashpic

Yes!! In fact I am working as a nurse right now on a telemetry unit and I am still on my probation. I have an unrestricted license (:

I was going through a very contentious divorce and he refused to leave so we ended up in many arguments. I was arrested with DV which was reduced to menacing did all that was required of me through the courts, 90 day rehab, fines and probation. Well I am having a really tough time finding a job even through I worked as a nurse for 10 yrs with the same organization, with no problems with disciplines. If anyone knows of a nurse that this has happened to please give me or any information about this.

@kimzor

How long before the NCLEX did you submit all your documents and how long did the board take to get into contact with you? I am in the same exact shoe. I have a DUI charge in 2014 dropped down to a wet wreckless conviction in April 2016. I will be graduating from the LVN program in January of 2017. I've completed all the programs and currently doing a 3 year probation. I know how long the process takes to send all documents into the board and i want to get everything done before actually graduating. Please help!! or if anyone have information, please email me at [email protected].

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