BWI at the Lake: what actually happens after the stop.
By Ty McDuffey, J.D. · Third-generation Lake of the Ozarks
A first-offense BWI — boating while intoxicated, RSMo §306.111 — is a Class B misdemeanor: up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine, prosecuted in the county where the Water Patrol stopped you. It won't suspend your driver's license. It will follow you as a criminal record. And more of them happen at this Lake than anywhere else in Missouri.
Why BWI is a Lake of the Ozarks specialty
The Lake concentrates the ingredients: tens of thousands of boats, a party-cove culture, summer holiday enforcement waves, and the Highway Patrol's Water Patrol Division running saturation patrols out of the busiest coves in the state. Holiday weekends reliably produce clusters of BWI arrests here — it's a charge that barely exists in most Missouri counties and is routine in Camden, Miller, and Morgan.
The stop: why boats are different from cars
The single biggest legal difference from a DWI: officers can stop a vessel for a safety inspection without the probable cause a car stop requires. Life-jacket counts, registration, equipment checks — any of it gets the Water Patrol alongside your boat lawfully. That means BWI defenses rarely live where DWI defenses often do (the bad stop) and instead live in everything after: the observations, the questioning, and above all the field sobriety tests — administered on a rocking boat, a floating dock, or a patrol vessel, to a person with lake legs, sun exposure, and a full day on the water. Those conditions are not a technicality; they're the defense.
What a first-offense BWI actually costs
Under §306.111, a first offense is a Class B misdemeanor — up to six months in jail and up to a $1,000 fine — with penalties escalating sharply for repeat offenses and anything involving injury (§306.112 territory). What it does not do: suspend your driver's license or appear on your driving record — a BWI is not a driving offense, so the DWI's parallel license track doesn't apply. What it does do: create a criminal conviction visible on employment and licensing background checks, and count as an intoxication-related offense that can enhance a later DWI or BWI. For anyone with a professional license, a security clearance, or a CDL, the record is the real penalty.
The Monday-morning checklist
- Write down everything now — the stop's stated reason, what tests were done and where (dock, boat deck, shore), water conditions, what you'd had and when, who was aboard. Memory is evidence and it evaporates.
- Find your paperwork — the ticket or summons controls your court date and county. Miss the date and a warrant makes everything worse.
- Say nothing further to anyone official until you've talked to counsel — the case is built on statements more often than on breath numbers.
- Talk to a Missouri defense attorney who actually works these counties — BWI outcomes turn on local prosecutor practices, and the Camden/Miller/Morgan courthouses each have their own rhythms.
- Ask about the long game — how a plea would interact with your record, your job, and enhancement risk if there's ever a next time.
The record question, ten years out
Missouri's expungement statute excludes most intoxication-related offenses, and the one-time ten-year expungement under §610.130 is written for alcohol-related driving offenses — which makes the record consequences of a BWI plea worth understanding before resolving the case, not after. Here's how Missouri's record-clearing rules actually work. The cheapest expungement is the conviction that never happens.
Educational content only, current as of July 13, 2026 — verify against the current text of RSMo §§306.111–306.112 and §610.130. Not legal advice; no attorney-client relationship. The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements.