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Recent Blog Posts in June 2010

June 15, 2010
  DUI LAWYER Orange County Fortuna police arrest seven at DUI checkpoint
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.times-standard.com/localnews/ci_15292802

The Fortuna Police Department conducted an impaired DUI checkpoint on Friday to ensure safe roads on Fortuna High School's graduation night.

The DUI checkpoint was on the 1300 block of Main Street in Fortuna, screening about 384 drivers, according to an FPD press release. Two drivers were arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence, three drivers were arrested on suspicion of driving unlicensed, two juveniles were arrested on suspicion of possessing alcoholic beverages, and five vehicles were towed.

Additionally, one adult male was observed staggering towards the bright lights of the DUI checkpoint. Officers contacted the subject, and he was arrested on suspicion of public intoxication.

The goal of these DUI checkpoints and saturation patrols is to remove impaired drivers from the roadways and to bring awareness to the public of the dangers of driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol, according to the press release.

The DUI checkpoint and DUI saturation patrols were funded by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

 

 

 

 

 

Continue reading "DUI LAWYER Orange County Fortuna police arrest seven at DUI checkpoint" »

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June 15, 2010
  Orange County Criminal LAWYER DUI checkpoints in Petaluma this weekend
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20100615/COMMUNITY/100619709?Title=DUI-checkpoints-in-Petaluma-this-weekend

Petaluma police are warning drivers they’ll be holding two DUI checkpoints Saturday night as they look for DUI drivers and those with license violations.


The DUI checkpoints will be held in two locations around town and will run from the evening into early Sunday.

Sgt. Ken Savano said such operations are done to raise awareness of the dangers of DUI and to get impaired drivers off the road.

Officers also check for valid licenses and proof of insurance.

Police agencies don’t reveal in advance where they’ll hold the checkpoint.

The cost of running the checkpoints will be funded by money from the California Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Savano said.

Continue reading "Orange County Criminal LAWYER DUI checkpoints in Petaluma this weekend" »

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June 15, 2010
  DUI LAWYER Orange County ESCONDIDO: Sobriety checkpoint set for Saturday
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.nctimes.com/news/local/escondido/article_0cca9705-ef74-516e-8f4a-0f91f1c64324.html

ESCONDIDO ---- Officers will conduct a driver's license and DUI sobriety checkpoint at an undisclosed location Saturday, according to the Escondido Police Department.

The goal of the DUI checkpoint is to improve traffic safety by removing impaired and unlicensed drivers from city roads, police said. Drivers who are caught DUI face time in jail, the loss of their driver's license, higher insurance rates and other expenses, police said.

Funding for the DUI program is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety.

The DUI checkpoint will last from 6 p.m. Saturday to midnight.

Continue reading "DUI LAWYER Orange County ESCONDIDO: Sobriety checkpoint set for Saturday" »

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June 14, 2010
  Orange County DUI Lawyer DUI checkpoints a game of legal cat and mouse
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

— Anderson County Sheriff's Deputy Joel Frazier is a good listener.

Frazier, a 12-year law enforcement veteran, has worked for the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office as a patrol deputy for six years.

Saturday night, Frazier was one of about two dozen deputies, Anderson City police patrol officers and South Carolina Highway Patrol troopers to participate in a series of DUI-checkpoints in Anderson County.

From 6 p.m. Saturday until just after 4 a.m. Sunday, Frazier, one of two Anderson County Sheriff's deputies dedicated to drunken-driving enforcement, initiated traffic stops on vehicles, screened drivers at checkpoints and eventually made a drunken-driving arrest during the special operation aimed at curbing drunken driving during the first three-day weekend of the summer

Frazier and Deputy Brent Moore are attached to the Anderson County Sheriff's CATCH Team. Their salaries, training and benefits are paid in part by a DUI grant from the South Carolina Office of Highway Safety, a division of the Department of Public Safety.

Both are experts in drunken driving law and, according to Frazier, "not being surprised at anything anyone does when they're drunk."

Saturday night, Frazier worked without Moore, who is on family leave.

Following the deputy as he made traffic stops, conducted field sobriety tests and put someone in jail for drunken driving was a crash-course in the reality that enforcing DUI law is, at times, a game of legal cat and mouse whose only happy ending is simply getting an unsafe driver off the road.

Frazier, a quiet man, is patient while on the job. He is not easily frustrated.

"It doesn't pay to get frustrated if you're working DUI enforcement in South Carolina," he said. "It's best to be a good listener, because you will get an earful from people sometimes."

Since January, Frazier and Moore have made about 70 drunken driving arrests in Anderson County, about one every other day.

"You'd think that, with how high South Carolina ranks on the alcohol-related fatalities list, people would wake up to the dangers," Frazier said Saturday night while patrolling the northbound side of U.S. 76 near Sandy Springs. "You work one fatal accident caused by alcohol, it's an eye-opening experience."

Frazier, who was careful with his words, said it was obvious that his role is to protect public safety.

"What isn't so simple is balancing fairness with my mandate to enforce the law while exercising my best judgment," he said.

On Kings Road in Anderson around 1 a.m. Sunday, his point was clearly demonstrated.

Having passed a sport utility vehicle in the oncoming lane of Brown Road whose driver failed to dim the highbeams, Frazier had made a u-turn and followed the vehicle as it rolled through a stop sign while making a left turn onto Kings Road.

"Sometimes an impaired driver will have a hard time seeing on a darkened road like this so they hit the highbeams," he said while he watched the vehicle weave along the winding road, often crossing the centerline and swinging wide around sharp curves. "They'll hit the brights and then they'll forget to flip them off."

Details, Frazier said. Details, details, details.

"We are trained to see, smell, feel and anticipate what an impaired driver is going to do," he said. "Forgetting to dim the brights or switch off the cabin light in the car, these are things impaired people tend to do."

After following the vehicle for about a mile, observing and, more importantly, recording it on the cruiser's dashboard camera, Frazier hit the blue lights and pulled the car over on Kings Road, about a quarter-mile from the intersection of Concord Road.

The driver, a white female in her early 50s, was not intoxicated.

She was weaving, she said, because she was having trouble seeing the road.

Her husband, who sat in the rear of the car to watch the infant child in the car seat next to him, was found holding an uncorked bottle of wine between his legs, a violation of state open-container laws.

"It's got to be carried in a compartment," Frazier said while writing the woman a ticket.

The husband took issue with the citation.

He complained that the deputy was wasting time and that the open container ticket was unfair.

He asked for a supervisor.

Frazier's supervisor, Sheriff's Sgt. Mike Binninger, arrived about 10 minutes later.

After another 10 minutes of explanation, the man asked for Binninger's supervisor..

Eventually, the couple returned to the car, open-container ticket in hand.

"Just another day in the life of a DUI enforcement officer," Frazier said with a smile and shrug.

"People get upset when we pull them over and that is understandable," he said a few minutes later. "But, as the officer responsible for making the stop, we own the responsibility for it, either way. If I hadn't pulled the vehicle over and it had been a drunk driver and they had killed themselves or someone else, then what? We have to consider the totality of the circumstances."

Frazier's first and only DUI arrest of the operation came at 1:45 Sunday morning, almost eight hours after he had begun.

While working a DUI checkpoint on U.S. 76 in Anderson between the Six-and-Twenty Bridge and Interstate 85, deputies watched a 1992 Toyota four-door approach the checkpoint and make a quick left turn into the parking lot of the Hilton Garden Inn nearby.

The driver of the car, a 20-year-old woman from Central, was driving with two passengers.

Frazier gave her a field sobriety test, a process that takes about 10 minutes.

She failed.

He took her into custody and drove her to the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division's Mobile Blood Alcohol Testing unit, or BatMobile, that was parked nearby. After informing the woman of the process of having her blood alcohol tested and providing her with a copy of the rules and regulations and her rights, Frazier sat in a small compartment inside the BatMobile, waiting for a 20-minute period to elapse.

"We have to give the suspect 20 minutes so that any residual alcohol in their mouth will dissipate," he said. "It is one of many technicalities we have to be careful about."

Meanwhile, the suspect sat in the larger compartment, locked in and unable to communicate with anyone other than Frazier, who sat about two feet away on the other side of a shatterproof plastic window.

When the 20 minutes had elapsed, the girl blew into the BAT testing machine.

Her blood-alcohol-content came back several points above the legal limit of .08.

It was almost 3:30 a.m.

An hour later, the woman was on her way into the bowels of the Anderson County Detention Center after being processed on a charge of minor-in-possession of alcohol for the purpose of consumption.

Because the woman was 20, Frazier said, state law applies in one of two ways: Either the woman can be charged with possession of alcohol or with DUI.

The possession charge and positive BAC test combine in an administrative capacity, meaning the woman will lose her license for at least 90 days but will not face the legal liabilities of a DUI charge.

“Charging someone under 21 with DUI can go one way or the other,” he said. “Again, it is confusing. I doubt she realizes what a bullet she’s dodged.”

As he stood in the enclosed area where prisoners are brought into the detention center, organizing his notes and ticket books, Frazier said, "We started this DUI arrest at 1:45 and here it is, almost 4:30. That's just one DUI and I haven't even done the paperwork on it. It's part of the job but I don't think the average person realizes how complex the laws are and how many resources are sucked into something as simple as them choosing to have a few too many drinks and drive."

He said, "It could be simpler, but it isn't. I'd just like people to know that, although they may get home safe after driving drunk, there’s that one time they may not and they’ll end up with us, going to jail.”

And if someone gets picked up but beats the drunken driving charge on a technicality?

“That’s certainly a possibility and it’s one we accept,” he said. “But there’s always that one time when technicalities don’t apply. A drunken driving fatality — that’s one thing a lawyer can’t find a remedy for and it isn’t something we are prepared to live with. They may beat us in court later but at least we’ve got them off the road for the night. That’s its own victory when you think about it.”

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Lawyer DUI checkpoints a game of legal cat and mouse" »

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June 14, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney Another Reason You Should Never Blow
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://abovethelaw.com/2010/06/another-reason-you-should-never-blow/

Not that we’re in the business of giving free legal advice, but there are a few things every Orange County DUI lawyer should know. Lawyers should know how to handle a traffic stop, for instance. They should know how to handle cops who shout slurs at you from across the street. And of course, lawyers should never snitch.

Some of these lessons come as a shock to laypeople, and even some lawyers who didn’t pay enough attention during Criminal Procedure. But high on the list of things that trained attorneys should never do is submit to a breathalyzer test. You don’t need to be a DUI defense attorney to know that you don’t blow.

The unwritten rule isn’t there to protect drunk drivers (okay, it kind of is there to protect drunks who operate high-speed killing machines); it’s also there to protect innocent people who don’t want to get caught up in the criminal justice system.

An article in today’s Washington Post underscores the point: the breathalyzer simply cannot be trusted, and juries can’t be trusted to know that…

Look at how many people were wrongly convicted — in part because of breathalyzer results — in Washington, D.C. alone over the past couple of years:

Nearly 400 people were convicted of driving while intoxicated in the District since fall 2008 based on inaccurate results from breath test machines, and half of them went to jail, city officials said Wednesday.

D.C. Attorney General Peter Nickles said the machines were improperly adjusted by city police. The jailed defendants generally served at least five days, he said.

Apparently, the calibrations weren’t even close to being correct:

The District’s badly calibrated equipment would show a driver’s blood-alcohol content to be about 20 percent higher than it actually was, Nickles said.

That is just unacceptable; are we sure that only 400 people got screwed by this?

The flawed testing does not jeopardize cases involving accidents or injuries, including fatal crashes, because blood or urine samples would have been taken as additional evidence, Nickles said.

Nickles said he does not believe the new findings will change the results of the routine DWI cases, either, because officers often relied on field sobriety tests and other observations for their arrests. Still, Assistant Police Chief Patrick Burke said he could see “reduced charges in cases.”

If there is a DUI defense attorney in the metro-D.C. area working on DUIs who buys that argument from Attorney General Nickles, then that defense attorney should be disbarred. You’re telling us that a breathalyzer result that was potentially 20% higher than it should have been wouldn’t influence a person’s plea decision or prejudice a jury? You’re saying that any number of DWI defendants would have been convicted on the strength of field sobriety tests and “other observations” alone? “Reduced charges”? D.C. courts should be flooded with entirely new trials to the extent that breathalyzer results were heavily relied upon evidence for convictions over the past two years.

Which brings us back to the central point: Don’t. Blow. Ever.  It’s self-incriminating — and potentially falsely self-incriminating — for no reason. If we want to protect ourselves from idiots who drive drunk, the way is to increase penalties on those rightly found guilty, not increase the likelihood that we’ll wrongly convict innocent people.

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney Another Reason You Should Never Blow " »

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June 14, 2010
  Orange County Criminal Attorney Crash test
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2010-06-08/news/ct-edit-dui-20100608_1_crash-test-police-officer-john-ardelean-breath-test

You already may know about the tragic case that is the genesis of this editorial. Our hope is that you'll urge your Illinois legislators to make such an outcome less likely to recur. The background:

In November 2007, off-duty Chicago police officer John Ardelean downed three beers and four shots in little more than two hours, according to prosecutors.

Later he swerved into an oncoming lane, slamming his Dodge Durango into a Pontiac Grand Am at Damen and Oakdale avenues. The DUI crash killed Miguel Flores, 22, and Erick Lagunas, 21.

The officers who responded to the scene could have asked Ardelean to take a DUI breath test to determine the alcohol level in his blood. But they didn't. They said they didn't smell alcohol or notice any other signs that Ardelean might be drunk.

By the time Ardelean was ordered by a supervisor to take the test — almost eight hours later — his blood-alcohol level was within the legal threshold. If he had been intoxicated, he no longer was.

That eight-hour gap torpedoed the case: In April a Cook County circuit court judge ruled that Ardelean had been arrested and detained without probable cause. Last Friday, prosecutors dropped charges of aggravated DUI and reckless homicide against Ardelean.

This case exposes a huge loophole in Illinois' DUI law — a loophole legislators need to close. Right now, motorists involved in serious accidents are compelled to take a breath test — if the cops ask them to do so. The state needs a law that makes such tests automatic — without exception — in all serious injury crashes. No officer discretion. No wiggle room. Even if you don't look inebriated or slur your words, even if you've sneaked those empties out of the car while officers tend to the injured, you would be tested.

And off-duty cops wouldn't be exempt.

We're often skeptical of laws that leave no room for judgment calls by public officials, police officers included. But an automatic testing law is fair to all drivers in serious crashes. Every major accident would be a discretion-free zone: The cops would just order drivers to take a breath or blood test, no questions asked and no objections honored. (Lagunas, the other driver in the Ardelean case, also had been drinking; his autopsy revealed a blood-alcohol level just below the legal limit.)

Continue reading "Orange County Criminal Attorney Crash test" »

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June 14, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County Daily traffic enforcement update
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.pineisland-eagle.com/page/content.detail/id/509884/Daily-traffic-enforcement-update.html?nav=5051

The Lee County Sheriff's Office DUI Unit is providing the information listed below in continuing efforts to increase traffic safety awareness and education, plus to emphasize the importance of obeying traffic laws to reduce DUI crashes, injuries and death on Lee County roads.

On Monday, June 14, 2010, the DUI Unit will target at least one of the following three locations for enforcement:



1. Pondella Road, North Fort Myers

2. Metro Parkway, Fort Myers

3. Pennsylvania Avenue, Bonita Springs



Locations are selected based upon high incidents of crashes, traffic surveys and citizen complaints. The Sheriff’s Office is committed to promoting traffic safety and enforcing the law. By focusing on violations such as red light running, speeding, DUI and others, motorists become more alert and are encouraged to obey traffic laws. The Sheriff’s Office Traffic Unit and District Patrol Deputies enforce our traffic laws each day by issuing citations and warnings. Preliminary results from their cumulative activity yesterday are as follows:



Citations Issued: 98

Written Warnings Issued: 160



Citizens can help by letting us know if they observe problem areas, aggressive or DUI drivers and by their compliance with the rules of the road. To get in touch with one of our traffic deputies call (239) 477-1000. If you see a reckless or drunk driver while you are traveling in your motor vehicle in Lee County, dial 9-1-1.

This traffic enforcement advisory is available each day on the Sheriff’s Office website at www.sheriffleefl.org.

Everyone is reminded to “Fasten Your Seat Belts, be courteous to drivers and pedestrians and together we can reduce traffic related fatalities, injuries and property damage.”

Note: Traffic Safety Tip of the Week: One of the most frequent citizen complaints is drivers running red lights. Red light running is also one of the most common causes of traffic crashes. Florida law was established creating higher fines and 4 points against your license in hopes of discouraging this risky habit. We encourage drivers to use good sense and always be prepared to stop at traffic signals.



Source: Lee County Sheriff’s Department

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County Daily traffic enforcement update" »

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June 14, 2010
  New Mexico Supreme Court Overturns DUI Without Driving
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/31/3171.asp

New Mexico's highest court on Tuesday reversed an interpretation of the driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI) statute that had discouraged motorists from sleeping off a night of drinking in their automobile. In December 2004, a police officer came upon Mark Sims who was asleep in the driver's seat of his car, which was legally parked in a commercial parking lot. Although the car keys were on the passenger seat and not in the ignition, a trial court and the court of appeals found him guilty of being in "actual physical control" of the vehicle.

"Under settled law, defendant had actual physical control if he could exercise direct influence over the vehicle," a divided court of appeals ruled. "Based on the facts of this case, there was nothing to prevent defendant from awakening, reaching for the keys, and driving from the parking lot."

The supreme court explained that this interpretation of "actual physical control" developed as a means of convicting people who had obviously driven their car while drunk but outside the view of a police officer. For example, it is obvious that a man passed out in his car in the middle of an intersection with the engine running got there by driving. The line of thought was extended to make having the potential to drive drunk in the future a crime. Justices decided such interpretations departed from the true purpose of the DUI laws.

"The threat, if any, that was posed by defendant as he lay passed out or asleep in his vehicle was far short of that posed by an intoxicated individual who is driving," Justice Edward L. Chavez wrote for the court. "While defendant arguably exercised some level of control over the vehicle, given his location in the driver's seat and the proximity of his keys, there was no indication that he posed any actual, as opposed to hypothetical, threat to the public."

The supreme court pointed out that prior court DUI decisions taken to an extreme make the roads less safe, not more safe.

"For example, on a cold night, an intoxicated person may use his vehicle as a temporary shelter -- as a place to sleep it off -- even going so far as to start the engine so that he can turn on the heater," Justice Chavez wrote. "Such an individual, while clearly in control of his vehicle, does not pose a threat to himself, herself, or the public precisely because he has decided not to drive. The individual's recognition that he is too intoxicated to drive embodies the aim of our DWI law and its enforcement. To subject this type of behavior to strict liability would be counterproductive."

As a result, the supreme court ruled that when an individual is arrested for DUI based on "actual physical control" of the vehicle -- as opposed to actually driving the vehicle -- the state must prove that the defendant actually intended to drive. Without making this distinction, drunks would be encouraged to take their chances on the road by driving home since the penalty would be the same as for sleeping it off in the car.

"The facts of this case exemplify how this language could be misinterpreted to allow a conviction for conduct the legislature did not intent to proscribe," Chavez wrote. "Otherwise, rather than driving while intoxicated, it would be parked while intoxicated."

The high court acknowledged that the new procedure set out in this decision will increase the burden on the prosecution and that police will have to gather evidence with greater care.

"A fact finder cannot simply assume or speculate that the individual in question might sometime in the future commence driving his or her vehicle," Chavez wrote. "Instead, the fact finder must assess the totality of the circumstances and find that (1) the defendant was actually, not just potentially, exercising control over the vehicle, and (2) the defendant had the general intent to drive so as to pose a real danger to himself, herself, or the public. In this case, the state failed to prove that defendant used the vehicle other than as a passive occupant. It was pure speculation whether defendant would rouse himself and drive the vehicle. Defendant could not be convicted for what he might have done. The state had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant actually exercised physical control over the vehicle with the general intent to drive so as to endanger the public."

Because the state could not do so, the charges against Sims were dismissed. A copy of the decision is available in a 65k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: PDF File New Mexico v. Sims (Supreme Court, State of New Mexico, 6/8/2010)

Continue reading "New Mexico Supreme Court Overturns DUI Without Driving" »

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June 14, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney New DUI and DMV law July 1st
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

Convicted drunken drivers in Sacramento County soon will have to convince their own cars they're sober before hitting the road.

Beginning July 1 in Sacramento and three other test counties, people convicted of first-time drunken-driving offenses must have ignition interlock devices – commonly known by the brand name Breathalyzer – installed in their vehicles for at least five months.

They'll have to blow into a tube, and if the device detects alcohol, the car won't start.

The pilot program is being hailed as a major step in California's decades-long efforts to cut drunken driving. Sacramento was included partly because of its high drunken-driving rate.

"By installing (the) devices, we are making it harder for DUI offenders to get behind the wheel while intoxicated, and we are working to save innocent lives," Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said after signing the bill.

Fourteen states have similar laws for first-time DUI offenders, said Laura Dean-Mooney, national president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. "The great thing is, (offenders) can continue to drive to work or take their kids to school."

The program will be tested through 2015 in Sacramento, Alameda, Los Angeles and Tulare counties. A report to the Legislature in 2015 will evaluate whether it worked.

It takes effect despite opposition from some Orange County criminal defense attorneys and restaurant industry lobbyists, who say it should be reserved for serious repeat offenders.

"With this law, you are going to have the occasional drinker who had a half glass of wine too much" and who is unlikely to reoffend, said Ignacio Hernandez, a lobbyist for California DUI lawyers.

He warned the technology could have glitches that cause false positive readings.

DUI remains one of the state's top road concerns, safety officials said. In 2008, 30 percent of California roadway deaths – more than 1,000 – occurred in crashes where at least one driver was legally drunk, according to the state Office of Traffic Safety.

"We have a problem of enormous consequences in the state," said the ignition device law's author, Assemblyman Mike Feuer, D-Los Angeles.

In 2008, the city of Sacramento had the highest drunken-driving injury and fatality rate among the state's largest cities.

The law could affect about 4,700 first-time drunken drivers per year in Sacramento County, state data suggest.

A Department of Motor Vehicles analysis shows that 4 percent to 5 percent of first-time offenders in Sacramento are involved in a second DUI incident – either a crash or an arrest – within a year.

Under the new law, if the DUI conviction is a person's first, the driver must have the ignition interlock device installed for five months. A second offense would require 12 months, and a third 24 months. The law doesn't apply to motorcycles.

If the first-time conviction involved injury, the device must remain for a year.

Most drivers will have to pay for installation and monthly rental fees. Feuer estimated installation costs will be $75 or more, and monthly monitoring costs $50 or more.

Those fees will be reduced by up to 90 percent for lower-income offenders. That could cause some installers to balk rather than lose money by subsidizing the costs, said Taylor Reed of Ignition Interlock Service Centers of California.

"You are saying the guy can't afford $2.75 a day for (an ignition device), but he can afford to drive a car and spend enough to get drunk?" Reed said.

Feuer, however, said he doesn't expect problems with installation companies, based on the state's experience with a limited number of court-ordered ignition interlock devices now put in cars.

The DMV, which in 2004 reviewed studies from other states and countries, says such programs appear to reduce repeat offenses by anywhere from 40 percent to 95 percent while the devices are in place. Recidivism rates rise once they're removed.

Ignition interlock devices are not new in California. The state allows judges to require drunken drivers to use such systems, but data show that few do so.

In Sacramento, judges ordered the devices installed in only 3 percent of DUI cases they handled in 2007. Just a few of those were for first-time offenders.

Feuer and other advocates, including Mothers Against Drunk Driving, say technology has improved considerably since the devices came on the scene two decades ago.

Some require both blowing and inhaling, or humming, so that people can't cheat by using compressed air machines.

Of course, a person who has been drinking can still get a friend to illegally blow into the tube, enabling the car to start.

But such cheaters may not get far. Today's devices require drivers to retake the breath test at random moments while driving. If they fail to do so within the allotted time, the device will record the event as a failed sobriety test.

IGNITION INTERLOCK DEVICES CARRY PLENTY OF BACKUP CAPABILITIES

 

Answers to common questions about ignition interlock devices installed in vehicles (abbreviated from the Department of Motor Vehicles):

Can someone use a balloon or other air source to mimic human breath?

No. Devices can detect phony breath samples.

Can a driver have someone else take the breath test?

Yes, but it's illegal. Also, once the car starts, the device will randomly require a "running retest." The driver must pull over and retake the test within a given time period, or the unit will log a violation. With some devices, the horn will honk until the vehicle is turned off.

Will the ignition interlock unit lose all memory if the battery is disconnected?

No. There is a backup battery in the unit.

What happens if a driver misses a required device service appointment?

The device may enter a lockout condition and the driver will not be able to operate the vehicle.

What if the driver is taking a medicine or mouthwash with an alcohol base?

Alcohol-based products can register on the device.

What happens when a driver fails the device's test?

The device will enter a lockout period of a few minutes for the first failed test and a longer lockout for any subsequent failed test.

Can other people, such as a spouse, drive the vehicle?

Yes, but they must pass the device's test.

What happens if the vehicle stalls in traffic?

The device permits the driver to restart the vehicle without another breath sample, but a breath sample will be requested shortly after restarting.



Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2010/06/14/2820380/dui-ignition-locks-take-effect.html#ixzz0qraY9kZS
Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney New DUI and DMV law July 1st" »

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June 13, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County Double trouble: Repeat DUI offenders a challenge for law enforcement
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/double-trouble-repeat-dui-offenders-a-challenge-for-law-enforcement-1.843591

On April 17, a few minutes after midnight, police in Dickson City pulled over what would turn out to be a stolen Ford Explorer along Business Route 6 after a report it had forced another vehicle off the road.

The driver, Donald Allen Kern, a 20-year-old carnival worker from Lehigh Acres, Fla., was arrested on suspicion of DUI after police say he almost fell while exiting the SUV, swayed back and forth as officers questioned him and failed a field sobriety test.

Less than eight hours later, Scranton police responded to crash in the 1500 block of Pittston Avenue in which a Jeep Grand Cherokee - also later determined to be stolen - hit three parked cars.

The driver ran, but officers found him a few blocks away. The man, who police said was extremely lethargic, slurred his words and appeared to be under the influence, was charged with DUI, among other offenses.

His name: Donald Allen Kern.

Such double DUI are infrequent but not rare, here or elsewhere. There have been at least three in Northeast Pennsylvania already this year, including a man who was arrested twice in two hours on March 5 by state police in Monroe County.

The Lackawanna County district attorney's office contends Mr. Kern's release after his Dickson City arrest was handled appropriately. However, that such incidents can and do happen raises questions about policies covering the release of suspected DUI offenders, especially at a time when driver impairment is increasingly tied to drugs other than alcohol, as apparently was the case with Mr. Kern.

Around the country, such policies vary by state and even by local jurisdiction.

In Pennsylvania, there is no required "sobering up" period, either by statute or uniform policy, before law enforcement must release a DUI suspect from custody. The state's Rules of Criminal Procedure mandate the prompt release of DUI drivers in most cases.

Mark Neil, a senior attorney with the National Traffic Law Center, said at least eight states have mechanisms for holding motorists arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol until their blood-alcohol level drops to a certain threshold.

"Most of the time it's not law, but it is policy," Mr. Neil said.

Alabama is among the most stringent. Under statewide policy, a DUI driver in Alabama is jailed until his blood-alcohol level reaches zero, said Brandon Hughes, traffic safety resource prosecutor for the Alabama District Attorneys Association. A suspect who refuses to submit to a blood-alcohol test is held for a full 24 hours.

"They want to make sure you are free of alcohol," Mr. Hughes said. "They certainly aren't going to guess and let you out."

In Indiana, law enforcement officials are authorized to hold suspects nabbed for alcohol-related DUI for varying lengths of time based on their intoxication level at the time of arrest.

For example, according to a chart approved by the Indiana legislature for determining the minimum time of detention, a suspect with a blood-alcohol level of 0.10 can be held for two hours, after which the level would typically have fallen below the 0.08 threshold for legal intoxication. Someone with a reading of 0.16 - double the limit - can be detained for nine hours.

"This is for public policy reasons that are obvious," Deborah Reasoner of the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council said in an e-mail. "We don't want to release an alleged drunk driver and have them repeat the offense and kill someone, and for civil liability reasons related to the safety of the public."

Ms. Reasoner said the underlying statute has passed constitutional muster. A 2001 Indiana Court of Appeals ruling held that DUI detentions are not punishment but rather serve the function of protecting the public from drunken drivers. As a result, the court found, they do not violate a suspect's protections against double jeopardy.

In many other jurisdictions, including Pennsylvania, it is common practice to release a DUI suspect into the custody of a sober, responsible adult, but even those policies can have permutations.

For example, in North Carolina, if no sober adult comes forward to take responsibility for a drunk driver, law enforcement can hold the offender until his blood-alcohol level drops below 0.05. The final judgment on when to release the suspect lies with a magistrate.

New Jersey's statute covering a suspect's release to a responsible adult - known as "John's Law" after a man killed by a drunk driver who got back behind the wheel after his release following an earlier DUI - also requires police to impound a DUI suspect's vehicle for 12 hours after the arrest.

The first of Mr. Kern's DUI arrests came five hours after Archbald police took him into custody the evening of April 16 on disorderly conduct and harassment charges arising from a dispute with his boss at the Sugerman's Plaza in Eynon, where the traveling carnival was set up.

He was taken to the county's Central Intake center at the courthouse for processing and booking and released around 9:30 p.m. Authorities allege Mr. Kern sometime later went to Memorial Stadium and stole the Scranton School District-owned Explorer that he was driving when Dickson City police stopped him.

During the stop, Mr. Kern denied consuming alcohol and a breath test showed none in system. He told officers he had taken two prescription medications - Klonopin, an anticonvulsant, and Darvocet, a painkiller - although he kept changing his story on his need for the drugs, according to arrest papers.

Dickson City police brought Mr. Kern back to the intake center for processing on the DUI charge, arriving at 1:05 a.m. on April 17, Lackawanna County First Assistant District Attorney Gene Talerico said. He was not charged in connection with the theft of the Explorer because, at that point, no one knew it was stolen.

Mr. Kern voluntarily submitted to have blood drawn for a drug screening, the results of which later showed he had nothing in his system other than Klonopin or derivatives of Klonopin at a level within the medication's therapeutic range, Mr. Talerico said.

Rule 519 of Pennsylvania's Rules of Criminal Procedure requires an arresting officer to "promptly" release a DUI defendant who faces no other, more serious charges when certain conditions are met, including posing "no threat of immediate physical harm" to himself or others.

While the threat-of-harm provision provides a level of discretion - a suspect who is too impaired to stand or walk would not be released immediately, for instance - there was no indication Mr. Kern was under the influence when the center released him to himself at 5:21 a.m., more than four hours after his arrival, Mr. Talerico said.

Ideally, DUI suspects are released to another individual, and one of the first questions the center asks a defendant is, "Do you have someone who can come to pick you up?" Mr. Talerico said.

If the answer is no, or the suspect declines assistance, the center must release him.

"There is nothing to stop a person from saying, 'I'm fine,'" he said. "There is nothing we can do to mandate how they leave our custody. ... Nothing in the law says you can only leave by cab or by somebody driving you home."

Sometime before 7:30 a.m. on April 17, when the crash on Pittston Avenue was reported, Mr. Kern allegedly stole the Jeep Cherokee from a garage on East Gibson Street where its owner had left it for repairs.

What else Mr. Kern might have done between his release from the center and the crash is unknown, Mr. Talerico said. He refused to consent to a second blood test after the second DUI arrest.

George Geisler Jr., a police officer and law enforcement services director for the Pennsylvania DUI Association, said law enforcement in the commonwealth had more latitude to hold a DUI suspect before 2005, when Rule 519 was amended to mandate prompt release.

Prior to the change, the arresting officer had the option to promptly release a suspect when the officer "deems it appropriate."

Mothers Against Drunk Driving takes no formal position on mandatory detention for DUI suspects or when it might be appropriate, said J.T. Griffin, vice president for public policy at the organization's office in Washington, D.C.

As MADD marks its 30th anniversary in 2010, the group's focus is on expanding the use of alcohol ignition interlocks to make them mandatory for all convicted drunken drivers in all 50 states, including Pennsylvania, he said.

However, he said MADD frequently receives reports from around the country about drunk drivers who are released "and the next thing you know, two hours later they are driving again."

"So a solution to that is making sure before they are released that their (blood-alcohol content) is below a certain number," Mr. Griffin said. "You can pick the number, but it should be below 0.08."

He acknowledged drivers who are under the influence of prescription medications or illegal drugs are a much thornier problem, presenting challenges not only for law enforcement but for MADD. A 2007 survey by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found more than 16 percent of weekend, nighttime drivers tested positive for illegal, prescription, or over-the-counter medication.

"There are just a host of issues that come with how we deal with the drug driving issue," Mr. Griffin said. "We are trying to figure what the solutions are, but it is a tough issue.

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County Double trouble: Repeat DUI offenders a challenge for law enforcement" »

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June 13, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County Bail set at $1 million for driver of DUI crash that killed 2 teens
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.king5.com/news/local/Graduation-C-96163949.html

SEATTLE -- It was an emotional scene in court Friday afternoon as a judge set a million dollars bail for the man accused of killing two teenagers in a DUI crash on I-5 in Tukwila Wednesday. And police say they found a half bottle of vodka in the car that rammed into the teenagers.

A judge ordered Alexander Peder, 50, held on one million dollars bail when Peder made his first court appearance Friday afternoon. Peder was charged with two counts of Vehicular Homicide and one count of Vehicular Assault.

Troopers say Wednesday night Peder plowed his Ford Explorer into the back of 19-year-old Anthony Beaver's Honda when it stalled along I-5 in Tukwila, killing back passenger Derek King, 18, and inflicting fatal wounds on Nicholas Hodgins, 18. Driver Anthony Beaver survived but was injured.

On Friday, about two dozen of the victims' high school friends and relatives packed the courtroom at the King County Jail. Lance Beaver, the father of the single survivor of the DUI crash, was also there and came face to face with the suspected drunk drive that plowed into his son's car. Lance's emotions were raw - he wanted Peder to see a picture of his smiling son and his best friends.

"I wanted him to see the faces of the two boys he murdered and he wouldn't look at us," said Lance.

According to court records, Peder was charged twice before for DUI. On both occasions, he plead to a lesser charge.

Lance Beaver says the night of the accident, Peder showed no remorse.

"He was trying to blame Anthony. He was telling Anthony he hit him and tried to blend in with the crowd," said Lance.

Outside of court, friends of the graduating high scholers hugged and held back tears. Saturday was graduation day for the boys. Injured Anthony Beaver will walk wearing his best friend's gown.

"He tore apart a community," said Lance Beaver. "He ruined hundreds of kids' graduation day. He tore families apart."

Troopers say the night of the accident, Peder had bloodshot, watery eyes, slurred his speech and smelled of alcohol. Inside Peder's car investigators found a half bottle of vodka with a receipt showing the liquor was bought just six hours prior to the crash.

Troopers also took a blood draw to check his alcohol level. They are still awaiting test results from the state lab.

Prosecutors say Peder could face a maximum of three years behind bars for each count of Vehicular Homicide.

Peder's Orange County Criminal Attorney declined to comment on the case.

The court appearance is just one day before Derek King and Nick Hodgins were supposed to receive their diplomas from Decatur High School in Federal Way.

The graduation ceremony is set for 4 p.m. at the Tacoma Dome. School spokesperson Diane Turner says there will be a "moment of silence" for the two graduates. The Federal way School District Superintendent says he will read King's and Hodgins' names at the time they were supposed to take the stage. Turner says the superintendent wants to leave students with hope.

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County Bail set at $1 million for driver of DUI crash that killed 2 teens " »

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June 13, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County Broadway checkpoint yields two DUI arrests
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.inforum.com/event/article/id/281710/group/News/

A DUI sobriety checkpoint in the 1400 block of Broadway in Fargo netted two DUI arrests, said Officer Jim VanLith of the Fargo Police Department.

The checkpoint, which was in place from 11:20 p.m. Friday through 2:30 a.m. Saturday, was conducted by the police department, Cass County Sherriff’s Department and the North Dakota Highway Patrol.

Law enforcement officials conducted 183 DUI checks, 33 of which were flagged for further testing. In addition to the DUI arrests, two citations were handed out: one for having an open container in the vehicle and another for careless driving, VanLith said.

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County Broadway checkpoint yields two DUI arrests" »

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June 13, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney Palm Springs Police Arrest Two People During DUI Checkpoint
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.kpsplocal2.com/Content/Headlines/story/Palm-Springs-Police-Arrest-Two-People-During-DUI/8REtMGWDeUC0_QiXjyB86w.cspx

More than eight hundred cars were screened Saturday night during a DUI checkpoint in Palm Springs.

The DUI checkpoint was held in the 4700 block of E. Palm Canyon Drive.

Here's a look at the numbers.

  • 2 people were arrested for DUI of alcohol or drugs.

 

  • 9 citations were issued for driver's license, insurance and other vehicle code violations.

As always, police encourage you to call 911 if you see anyone driving that you believe is DUI.

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney Palm Springs Police Arrest Two People During DUI Checkpoint" »

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June 10, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney SIMS v. STATE
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.leagle.com/unsecure/page.htm?shortname=inflco20100609192

MICHAEL KENNETH SIMS, Appellant,
v.
STATE OF FLORIDA, Appellee.

No. 4D08-5040.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

June 9, 2010.

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and James W. Mclntire, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and James J. Carney, Senior Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

PER CURIAM.

Appellant was convicted of DUI manslaughter and sentenced to 15 years in prison with a four-year mandatory minimum. As the state concedes, imposition of the mandatory minimum DUI sentence was error. Appellant's sentence was controlled by the law in effect at the time of his offense. See Larkins v. State, 739 So. 2d 90, 96 n.5 (Fla. 1999). At the time appellant was sentenced in 2008, the statute required a four-year mandatory minimum. See § 316.193(3)(c)3., Fla. Stat. (2008). However, in February 2007, the time of the DUI offense in this case, the statute did not impose a mandatory minimum. See § 316.193(3)(c)3., Fla. Stat. (2006). The legislature amended the law in 2007 to provide for a mandatory minimum sentence. Ch. 2007-211, § 3, Laws of Fla. The change did not go into effect until July 1, 2007, approximately 5 months after appellant committed the underlying crime. Id. § 5.

On the remaining issue, we detect no fundamental error in the prosecutor's closing argument. The statements appellant points to on appeal were either fair comments on the evidence or reasonable inferences that could be drawn from it.

We affirm the DUI conviction and remand to the circuit court for resentencing.

GROSS, C.J., STEVENSON and CIKLIN, JJ., concur.

Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.


This copy provided by Leagle, Inc.

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney SIMS v. STATE" »

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June 10, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/blogs/local-opinion-zone/Md-Attorney-Generals-Appointee-Carl-Snowden-again-arrested-for-drunk-driving-has-history-of-traffic-violations-politicians-cover-as-usual-96062984.html

Civil rights activist. Annapolis Alderman. Aide to County Executive. Director of the Attorney General's Office of Civil Rights and drunk driver in 2002, drunk driver in 2005 and drunk driver again this week. Carl Snowden was arrested early Tuesday morning for DUI, according to The Baltimore Sun. That is above the state's legal limit of 0.08 percent for DUI and 0.07 percent for driving while impaired. The Sun reported that Snowden was charged with DUI, driving while impaired by alcohol, negligent driving, failure to obey traffic control devices and failure to obey designated land directions, police said. Snowden reportedly told police that he had only one drink, but apparently did not provide details about the size or amount of alcohol in that one drink.

Snowden has a long history of disobeying traffic laws including excessive speeding! (See the end of this story for details)

Snowden was recently named the chair of the Housing Authority of Annapolis (HACA) by former Mayor Ellen Moyer and was confirmed by the previous council.  Following his appointment to HACA, its executive director, Eric Brown, soon resigned. At least one if not both of his previous DUI charges occurred while he was an appointed aide to former Anne Arundel (as in "AA"...heh heh) County Executive Janet Owens. Recently, Snowden served as master of ceremonies for the campaign kick-off of Democrat Joanna Conti for county executive. He was active in Mayor Josh Cohen's recent campaign. The peripatetic Snowden is seen virtually most anywhere in Anne Arundel and Annapolis politics and government.

According to The Sun, the recently-elected Annapolis Alderman Kenny Kirby, whose Sixth Ward includes a large portion of the city's public housing, came to Snowden's defense. "It shouldn't have any impact," Kirby said. "I grew up with Carl. He's a good friend of mine. … He's on top of his game."  Fortunately the only thing so far which did not have any impact was Snowden's car with another car or human being. Indeed, Snowden may be on top of his game. The question is what game might that be and why is Kirby, a frequent advocate for youth, defending a man who is not only putting innocent civilians at risk, but is potentially serving as a role model as well. Does the fact that they grew up together tell us anything else we might need to know? Perhaps Kirby can explain why he rationalizes Snowden's criminal activity.

But what of Snowden's current boss and our state's top law enforcement official? Gansler's office is keeping quiet, claiming it is a personnel matter and despite repeated pleas asking for any kind of comment from Gansler or whether he is reviewing the situation, his media spokesperson would offer no comment.

Things might be a lot different if someone had been injured or killed, but would this have been a violation of the victim's civil rights? After one offense, perhaps it would have put Snowden on notice that he had to correct his behavior, but now that he is a three-time recidivist drunk driver, as will as repeat offender of traffic laws, will Gansler, the state's top law enforcement officer, take action against his appointee who serves at his pleasure? Janet Owens let the whole thing pass over without any action or substantive response after which Gansler appointed him.

What about three strikes and you're out? Will a judge see this for what it is and treat Snowden in the harsh manner he deserves? Send him to jail? Send him to treatment? Take away his license? Will Gansler tell him he is no longer needed or will Gansler and justice turn a not-so-blind eye, and simply slap him on the wrist?

Annapolis Mayor Josh Cohen said, "These charges are serious and concerning. Carl is entitled to due process under law. Although I haven't spoken to him about this, I know Carl is one to take responsibility for his actions. I hope this does not take away from the urgent work we still have to do at the Housing Authority. Carl is the right person to be at the helm and turn the Housing Authority around, and I hope to continue working with him in that capacity."

Oh yes, Snowden has always had due process serve in his favor, but this time?

How bad is driving with a BAC of .09? According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, in 1998, the United States drivers with BACs between .08-.09 were involved in an estimated 17,200 crashes that killed 993 and injured 32,000. BACS of .10 and above were involved in an estimated 999,000 crashes that killed 12,530 and injured 719,000. Positive BACs below .08 were involved in an estimated 33,700 crashes that killed 2,412 and injured 70,000. 2007 figures for alcohol-related traffic fatalities in Maryland include 179 deaths and approximately 29% of total traffic fatalities were alcohol-related. About three in every ten Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at some time in their lives and drunk driving is the nation's and Maryland's most frequently committed violent crime.

And Alderman Kiurby's ears should perk up when he learns that MADD says that alcohol use is the number one problem among young people and 10% of 4th graders are now reporting that they have tried alcohol. 2.6 million teenagers don't know that a person can die from an alcohol overdose and eight young people a day die in alcohol related crashes. Traffic crashes are the major cause of death for children in the age group 0-14. Almost one quarter (21.4%) of these deaths are alcohol related. Traffic crashes are the greatest single cause of death for ages 6-28. Almost half are alcohol related. 33% of nearly 200,000 students surveyed said that their parents often do not set clear rules. Half said they are not disciplined routinely when they break the rules.

Perhaps Alderman Kirby, the great advocate for youth in Annapolis, who grew up with Mr. Snowden was not aware of these facts and statistics. I clearly recall that years ago when the second offense occurred, a high-level Annapolis police officer, who like Snowden, is an African American and Annapolis native, told me that he wished he had been the arresting officer. Furthermore he told me he wished Snowden would have resisted arrest. On the other hand, Alderman Kenny Kirby, who defends Snowden, says this three-time drunk driver (at least that's how many times he has been caught)  is "on top of his game".

This appears to be Snowden's game, when it comes to respecting traffic laws. The below information was taken from the Maryland Court's website:

In 1999, he received Probation Before Judgment (PBJ) for failure to stop when required.
In 2001 he got Probation Before Judgment (PBJ) in Baltimore for failing to obey properly placed traffic control device instructions.
In 2001 he was found guilty of operating a motor vehicle with an occupant under 16 not restrained by a seatbelt or safety seat.
In 2001 pleaded not guilty but got PBJ for going 83 in a 55mph zone
In 2001 he pleased guilty and then in 2002 was found guilty of driving 88 mph in a 55 mph zone
In 2002 he pleaded not guilty but was found guilty for failure to drive right of center.
In 2004 he was fined for again operating a motor vehicle with an occupant under 16 not restrained by a seatbelt or safety seat.
In July 2003 he was given PBJ for negligent driving.
In 2002 he pleaded not guilty and was given PBJ for again failing to obey properly placed traffic control device instructions.
In 2005 he was found guilty of negligent driving at 2:33 AM.
In 2006 and in 2007 he was again found guilty of operating a motor vehicle with an occupant under 16 not restrained by a seatbelt or safety seat
In each and every one of these cases, Snowden got off with either a tiny fine or court costs.
There is an active case against him now for leaving unattended vehicle without stopping engine, locking ignition, removing key and setting brake. Will he plead not guilty?
In 2008, he was fined for going 84 in a 65 mph zone. In 2009 he was found guilty for failure to display his license. There is an active case against him for failure to apply for duplicate license when license was mutilated.

Previous DUI violations ended asNolle prosequi, , a declaration made by a prosecutor in a criminal case or by a plaintiff in a civil lawsuit either before or during trial, meaning the case against the defendant is being dropped. Let's see if the best lawyers or judges in Maryland can get Snowden off this time.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/blogs/local-opinion-zone/Md-Attorney-Generals-Appointee-Carl-Snowden-again-arrested-for-drunk-driving-has-history-of-traffic-violations-politicians-cover-as-usual-96062984.html#ixzz0qVEJt0IJ

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney" »

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June 09, 2010
  Orange County Criminal Attorney Prosecutor wanna-be arrested on DUI and drug charges
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.examiner.com/x-27443-Seattle-Business-Ethics-Examiner~y2010m6d8-Prosecutor-wannabe-arrested-on-DUI-and-drug-charges

In the category of "what was he thinking", Clallam County prosecutor wanna-be David Russell Fox was arrested today at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SeaTac) after brandishing a knife at a ticket agent. Fox was booked into King County Jail. Bail was set at $3,000.

Fox is a DUI attorney and recently admitted to engaging in sexual activity with a client, claiming that it was consensual. Ethics rules for DUI lawyers prohibit them from starting sexual relationships with their clients, and the sheriff's office said it would file a complaint with the bar association. To date, the attorney general's office declined to file charges. Fox claims to be the victim of a "gay witch hunt" and that his clients often fall in love with him.

Fox returned to his vehicle which he had parked on Airport Way and was approached by Port of Seattle officers who had been called by the ticket agent. The agent described Fox as wearing a floppy hat, khaki shorts and a Hawaiian shirt. According to the agent, Fox repeatedly pulled out a knife and asked "weird questions."

According to the police report: "[Fox] was unsteady on his feet and kept repeating the same questions, telling [the officer] over and over that [the officer] need[ed] to call the Clallam County Sheriff's Office so they could tell [the officer] who [Fox] was and that he was running for office. [Fox] told [the officer] over and over that he is a DUI attorney, and that I have no right to stop him."

The report further notes that another officer spotted a marijuana pipe on the passenger's seat, and a search turned up a bag of marijuana and prescription pills for which Fox had no prescription.

Continue reading "Orange County Criminal Attorney Prosecutor wanna-be arrested on DUI and drug charges " »

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June 09, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney Delco school bus driver facing DUI charge
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

SWARTHMORE, Pa. - A Swarthmore school bus driver is facing DUI charges after police say she had a blood-alcohol level more than four times the legal DUI limit while transporting a student.

Police say 48-year-old Christine Rogers was admitted to a hospital after being pulled over Monday afternoon. She will be arraigned on DUI charges following her release.

Swarthmore police Chief Brian Craig says a motorist noticed the bus driving erratically and alerted authorities. He says Rogers had an empty vodka bottle and more liquor on the bus. A teenage student was also on board.

A preliminary DUI test showed Rogers had blood-alcohol level of 0.374. The legal limit for drivers in Pennsylvania is 0.08.

Wallingford-Swarthmore School District officials say Rogers was immediately fired.



Read more: http://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/state/pennsylvania/20100609_ap_phillyareaschoolbusdriverfacingduicharge.html#ixzz0qNvhLzj9
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June 09, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney Police blotter 6/9
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.southtownstar.com/neighborhoodstar/frankfort/2368886,060910fmcops.article

NEW LENOX

DUI ARREST Matthew Vanderlugt, 19, 110 Hickory St., New Lenox, was charged with DUI, driving in the wrong lane and not wearing a seat belt after a stop May 20 in the 100 block of Prairie Road, police said.

DUI CHARGE William Bardell, 49, of Joliet, was charged with DUI, battery, improper lane use and failure to signal after being stopped May 26 in the 700 block of East U.S. 30, police said.

MARIJUANA CHARGE Cedric Burkett, 18, of Joliet, was charged with possession of marijuana May 26 in the 400 block of West U.S. 30, police said.

SUSPENDED LICENSE Gregory Hazel, 37, 17201 Drexel Ave., South Holland, was charged with driving on a suspended license and failing to signal after a stop May 28 at Interstate 80 and U.S. 30, police said.

WILL COUNTY

JEWELRY THEFT Jewelry was stolen May 25 from a house in the 1300 block of North Cedar Road in New Lenox Township.

POT POSSESSION Michael P. Watcher, 18, of 19649 Stonehedge, Frankfort Township, was charged with possession of marijuana and drug equipment May 26 in the 2000 block of Deerfield Court in Frankfort Township, police said.

GASOLINE THEFT A woman drove off without paying for $38 worth of gasoline May 28 at a station in the 19700 block of Harlem Avenue in Frankfort Township.

SUSPENDED LICENSE Kadeem M. Watson, 19, 19451 Everett Lane, Mokena, was charged with DUI and without headlights after a May 29 stop at LaGrange Road and Willow Lane in Frankfort Township, police said.

VEHICLE BURGLARIES Police are investigating reports of four vehicle burglaries May 30 in Frankfort Township. The break-ins occurred in the 2000 block of Mary Therese Lane, the 7900 block of West Frankfort Square Road, the 2000 block of Westport Drive and the 7800 block of Farmhouse Road.

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney Police blotter 6/9" »

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June 09, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County Update: Details about Bolts DUI arrest
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://calcoastnews.com/2010/06/update-details-about-bolts-dui-arrest/

San Luis Obispo Undersheriff Steve Bolts is currently on vacation without pay and his DUI arrest Saturday night is scheduled to be the subject of an internal investigation by the Sheriff’s department [Tribune]

Two Atascadero police officers responded to an anonymous phone tip at 8:23 p.m., alleging that Bolts, 56, was DUI after leaving a barbecue for a local girls’ soccer team.

According to Atascadero police, the caller identified Bolts by name, rank, and license plate number.

Police intercepted Bolts, driving his personal truck, near the intersection of El Camino Real and Del Rio Road about six minutes after receiving the anonymous call.

The undersheriff was arrested after failing a DUI sobriety test. Preliminary investigations indicate that Bolts’ blood alcohol content was above the legal driving level.

Bolts was taken to Twin Cities Hospital for a blood test before he was released with a promise to appear in DUI court.

Sheriff Pat Hedges picked Bolts up after he had been released.

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County Update: Details about Bolts DUI arrest" »

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June 09, 2010
  Orange County DUI Attorney Snowden, attorney general's aide, charged with DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2010-06-08/news/bs-md-ar-snowden-arrest-20100608_1_snowden-southern-district-police-station-arrest-and-charges

Carl O. Snowden, a longtime Annapolis activist and director of the Office of Civil Rights for the attorney general's office, was arrested early Tuesday and charged with DUI, according to Anne Arundel police.

Snowden, 55, was arrested for DUI after a county police officer saw his Acura Integra drifting in and out of his southbound lane on Route 97 near Farm Road in Crownsville, police said. It was Snowden's third DUI arrest since 2002.

Shortly before 1:30 a.m., the arresting officer reported that Snowden veered across the center line and straddled the shoulder several times before the officer pulled him over for DUI.

Continue reading "Orange County DUI Attorney Snowden, attorney general's aide, charged with DUI" »

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June 09, 2010
  South Monterey County police agency to hold DUI checkpoint (updated 11 a.m.)
Posted By Coffey and Coffey
Continue reading "South Monterey County police agency to hold DUI checkpoint (updated 11 a.m.)" »

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June 09, 2010
  BORDENTOWN TOWNSHIP: Deputy mayor’s DUI arrest details surface
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

 http://www.centraljersey.com/articles/2010/06/09/the_register_news/news/doc4c0fb003c8c80507114095.txt

A report detailing the recent DUI arrest of Bordentown Township Deputy Mayor Anita DiMattia on DUI charges in Mansfield said she identified her political position three times to the arresting officer.

   Meanwhile, witnesses in a report on her prior arrest for similar charges in Lawrence Township in 2007 said she hit a parked vehicle, switched sides with the driver, and then left the scene, leaving behind the bumper of her vehicle. In the Lawrence incident her driver’s license was suspended for three months and she was ordered to attend a special DUI class, according to a court official.

   In Mansfield, Ms. DiMattia, who is Bordentown Township’s liaison to the township Police Department, was charged May 22 with DUI, making an illegal U-turn, and reckless driving. In a report from Sgt. Donald Mathews obtained through the Open Public Records Act, Sgt. Mathews said he stopped her 2010 Volkswagen Jetta for making an illegal U-turn and, thinking she was lost, asked where she was going.

   ”DiMattia indicated that she was heading home, to Bordentown Township, and added that she was the Deputy Mayor of Bordentown Township,” Sgt. Mathews wrote. She also handed over her license, registration and proof of insurance, he wrote. Ms. DiMattia said she was coming from Florence, despite the fact she was originally driving toward that township, and she told the officer she had had two beers at the River Rock Bar & Grill in Florence, according to the report.

   ”At this point, I requested that DiMattia exit and walk to the rear of the vehicle,” he wrote. “Ignoring my request, she stated, ‘here you go,’ and attempted to hand me an ID badge which identified her as a Deputy Mayor. After advising her that I was not interested in her ID badge, I instructed DiMattia to set out of her vehicle.

   ”When DiMattia complied and exited her vehicle, I asked her again how much she had to drink prior to driving. DiMattia stated again that she had ‘two beers,’ and indicated again, for the third time, that she was the Deputy Mayor of Bordentown Township,” the report said.

   Sgt. Mathews wrote Ms. DiMattia failed three field sobriety tests, and admitted to having consumed “‘more like four beers.’” At the station the report indicated her blood-alcohol level was measured at .21 percent, nearly three times the legal DUI limit of .08 percent.

   Her court date in Mansfield is set for June 24.

   In a DUI report from Lawrence Township police dated March 31, 2007, Patrolman S. Sudol wrote that a resident called police after a vehicle struck a parked vehicle in front of their residence. The victim told police they saw a woman and a man get out of the car, switch seats, and get back inside with the man in the driver’s seat and leave the bumper behind, according to the report.

   Police soon spoke with Ms. DiMattia at Meadow Woods Apartments, where she told police she missed a turn and struck something while making a K-turn, but was scared and drove off, the report said. In the report Ms. DiMattia denied switching places with her friend.

   Ms. DiMattia was charged with driving under the influence, refusal to submit breath, reckless driving, leaving the scene, failure to report, and DUI in a school zone. A court official said Tuesday Ms. DiMattia pleaded guilty to DUI and failure to report and the other charges were dismissed. She had to pay a total of $753 in fines, lost her license for three months, had to attend 12 hours of class at the Intoxicated Driver Resource Center and had 30 days in jail suspended pending completion of the program, the official said.

   At the May 24 meeting of the Bordentown Township Committee, Ms. DiMattia called her recent arrest a “personal” matter and said she had no intention to step down from her positions in the township. She could not be reached for comment this week.

   ”Her outright refusal to step down as liaison to the Police Department reflects, in my opinion, a level of arrogance common among corrupt public officials throughout state of New Jersey and sends a clear message to residents, at least ones I’ve talked to,” said Committeeman Jason Medina, a Democrat.

   ”As long as you’re part of the voting majority on the committee you can pretty much do everything short of killing somebody without facing the repercussions, I think that’s the message being sent now.”

   Mr. Medina said he was not satisfied with closed session discussion of her liaison status at the May 24 meeting, in which he said she refused to resign as police liaison, and that it should not have been a closed matter in the first place, since she is not a township employee.

   ”This is to some extent a tragedy but it is absolutely a self-created tragedy,” said Committeeman William Morelli, a Republican.

   ”She has made it a public matter, and I believe as long as this cloud is over her, it’s a complete distraction, it causes incredible resentment among the public, and it is completely inappropriate for her, until this is adjudicated, to be the liaison to public safety, police, and emergency.”
Continue reading "BORDENTOWN TOWNSHIP: Deputy mayor’s DUI arrest details surface" »

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June 09, 2010
  Jail update on Lindsay Lohan: bail paid, Lohan on thin ice
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.examiner.com/x-51056-Atlanta-Pop-Culture-Examiner~y2010m6d9-Jail-update-on-Lindsay-Lohan-bail-paid-Lohan-on-thin-ice

Lindsay Lohan is rumored to be in SCRAM violation.

Jail seemed like a sure thing for the troubled alcohol-drinking star Lindsay Lohan on Tuesday, June 8, according to the LA Times blog.

Lindsay, still on probation from her June 2007 DUI arrest, really couldn't afford to keep ticking off the judge.

Lohan didn't see it that way, though, choosing to imbibe after the MTV Movie Awards anyway.

Lindsay Lohan and Judge Marsha Revels

Los Angeles Judge Revels called an emergency meeting in her chambers for Tues., June 8 at 3 p.m. (PST) upon learning of Lindsay's SCRAM violation.

SCRAM, the DUI -monitoring bracelet gracing the actresses ankle at present, had sent out a violation message to the monitoring company on Sunday evening during an MTV after-party, according to Gossip Cop.

Judge orders Lohan's arrest and sets new bail

Judge Revels met with the LA prosecutor and Lindsay's lawyer in her closed-door chambers to discuss the DUI violation and report. The end result? Lohan's $100,000 bail from the Cannes Film Festival passport 'no show' was forfeited and a new bail in the amount of $200,000 set.

Lindsay Lohan's legal supervisor also issued a bench warrant for the arrest of Lohan as well, sending Lindsay's DUI lawyer scurrying to get a bail bondsman to make bail, yet again on behalf of the alcohol-controlled starlet.

Arrest warrant to be served on Wednesday, gets halted by bail payment

Lindsay, all fun and games until she thinks she will have to do jail time, joined her CRIMINAL lawyer in a frenzied effort to get bail made and paid before Judge Revels could speed up the anticipated Wednesday public arrest.

Late Tuesday afternoon a bail bondsman paid the requisite ten percent, a $20,000 drop in the bucket for a celebrity, and all the future Linda Lovelace role-player will have to do now is turn herself in on Wednesday and be officially 'arrested' and go through the bail out process.

Judge Marsha Revels, the queen of patience

Lindsay Lohan has been blessed to have a judge that has afforded her every opportunity to get it right. Judge Revels is expecting Lohan to toe the line from now until the July 6 probation hearing, but the judge undoubtedly figures the actress will flub up again...soon.

Will Lindsay Lohan make it another month without getting herself thrown in the slammer for a more definitive time period? Should Lohan be given the opportunities not afforded many other repeat offenders who thumb their nose at the justice system in our land? Lindsay seems to think being a Hollywood actress affords her 'perks' like this. What do the fans of the actress have to say?

Continue reading "Jail update on Lindsay Lohan: bail paid, Lohan on thin ice " »

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June 09, 2010
  Judge issues warrant for Lohan's arrest after ruling she violated bail, recalls it after $20,000 posted
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.polijam.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7229:judge-issues-warrant-for-lohans-arrest-after-ruling-she-violated-bail-recalls-it-after-20000-posted&catid=57:entertainment&Itemid=56

A DUI arrest warrant for Lindsay Lohan has reportedly already been recalled.

A judge had issued the DUI warrant earlier today after the actress allegedly set off her court-ordered, booze-sensing ankle bracelet during an MTV Movie Awards after-party Sunday thrown by singer Katy Perry.

But just over an hour later, a bail bondsman posted $20,000 — or 10 percent of Lohan’s newly upped $200,000 bail — meaning she can remain free, barring further probation violations, until her July 6 hearing regarding a DUI arrest.

Earlier in the day, the judge had upped the "Mean Girls" actress’s bail to $200,000 after an emergency meeting between prosecutors and the actress’s Orange County criminal attorney.

Continue reading "Judge issues warrant for Lohan's arrest after ruling she violated bail, recalls it after $20,000 posted" »

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June 08, 2010
  Billings man charged with 6th DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://billingsgazette.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/article_040d7eca-7275-11df-90c0-001cc4c03286.html

A Billings man with five DUI convictions and nine convictions for driving with a suspended license pleaded not guilty Monday to a new felony DUI charge.

Mark Sanchez, 57, appeared in District Court for arraignment by video from the county jail. Judge G. Todd Baugh set bond at $15,000.

Sanchez was arrested June 2 by a Montana Highway Patrol trooper who stopped a Ford Ranger for speeding on Interstate 90. Court records state the trooper noticed the driver smelled of alcohol and admitted to having “a few drinks.” The trooper also reported he saw two partially empty beer bottles inside the truck.

Sanchez performed poorly on field DUI tests and refused to give a breath sample. He has prior DUI convictions in 2002, 1995, 1992, 1991 and 1990, according to court records.

Continue reading "Billings man charged with 6th DUI" »

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June 08, 2010
  Weymouth man faces several DUI charges
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/06/08/weymouth_man_faces_several_dui_charges/

A Weymouth man was ordered not to drive yesterday, after he was accused of DUI with an unbelted child in the vehicle, authorities said.

Michael J. Tompkins II, 40, was released on $2,500 cash bail after he was arraigned at Quincy District Court, authorities said.

Tompkins pleaded not guilty to DUI, child endangerment while operating under the influence, failure to stop for police, leaving the scene of property damage, and negligent operation of a motor vehicle, according to David Traub, spokesman for the Norfolk district attorney’s office.

Tompkins was also issued a civil citation for having a child in the car without a seat belt, Traub said.

Police responded shortly before 5 p.m. Friday to a report of a hit-and-run, said Weymouth police Captain James Mullin.

He said that Tompkins was driving a Chevrolet van when he hit another car in the vicinity of Norton Street and fled the scene.

The woman driving the car Tompkins allegedly hit followed the van and called police with its whereabouts.

Police caught up to the van on Westminster Road, but it did not stop immediately and continued onto Washington Street, Mullin said.

“He got to a different part of town,’’ Mullin said. “He deliberately delayed pulling over despite the fact that there was a police car behind him with lights and sirens.’’

Tompkins eventually pulled over in the parking lot of a pub on Washington Street.

“Immediately upon exiting the car, the officer found him unsteady on his feet, [there were] smells of alcohol; and the standard DUI tests were performed,’’ Mullin said.

A 6-year-old girl was sitting in the front passenger seat and not wearing a seat belt, Mullin said.

She was turned over to her mother, and reports were forwarded to the state Department of Children and Families, he said.

According to the court clerk’s office, it was the second DUI offense for Tompkins, Traub said. But Mullin said it was his third offense.

Tompkins is due back in court next month.

Continue reading "Weymouth man faces several DUI charges" »

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June 08, 2010
  ORANGE COUNTY DUI CHECKPOINTS
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_15178437

Where they'll be

Carson. Deputies will conduct a DUI and driver's license checkpoint from 7 tonight to 3 a.m. Saturday at a location to be determined.

Inglewood. Police will conduct a DUI sobriety checkpoint from 8 p.m. Saturday to 3:30 a.m. Sunday in the eastbound lanes of Manchester Boulevard at Kareem Court.

Drunken drivers targeted

Los Angeles County. The Avoid the 100 DUI Task Force will conduct checkpoints and saturation patrols this weekend in an effort to prevent alcohol-related crashes and deaths.

The California Highway Patrol is deploying 80 percent of all available officers onto freeways and county roads in its jurisdictions.

Down in the OC, too

Orange County. The Orange County Sheriff's Department and police will conduct DUI roving patrols in Aliso Viejo, Dana Point, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods, Lake Forest, Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Anaheim, Buena Park, Fountain Valley, Fullerton, Irvine, La Habra, Orange, Placentia, Seal Beach, Tustin and Westminster.

Continue reading "ORANGE COUNTY DUI CHECKPOINTS" »

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June 08, 2010
  Darien Conducts First-Ever DUI Checkpoint
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://darien.patch.com/articles/darien-conducts-first-ever-dui-checkpoint

"Good evening. Sobriety checkpoint."

Police repeated that greeting to scores of drivers passing along Post Road Saturday night and Sunday morning, as Darien held its first-ever DUI checkpoint.

Stationed between the parking lots of the HSBC bank and the shuttered Cookhouse Restaurant, officers from the Darien and Stamford police departments stopped drivers over the course of three and a half hours, conducting brief interviews and looking for signs of intoxication.

"What we'll end up doing is asking three to four questions: where you're coming from, where you're going, how much you had to drink tonight," Marron said Saturday night. "Fourth question, if need be: we ask if they have a driver's license."

Marron added that, as established in past court decisions, officers were only allowed to ask those four questions upfront to guard against violating drivers' legal rights.

"[But] if it turns out they've admitted to drinking, or it seems to us that they've been drinking, we pull them into one of the lots and continue the interview," Marron said.

There, officers administered field DUI tests, instructing stopped drivers to follow a finger with their eyes, lift one leg up for several seconds, and walk a straight line. Those who failed were charged and taken to Stamford or Darien police headquarters.

Police made five DUI arrests at the checkpoint—4 by Darien officers, 1 by Stamford police—and towed the vehicles of several other drivers who were found lacking a license or proper paperwork.

According to Darien's Lt. Don Anderson, one screening required police to call in an officer from Stamford to translate for a Polish-speaking driver. He was ultimately handcuffed and taken away in a cruiser.

Two other DUI arrests were made overnight by Darien officers at locations other than the checkpoints, Marron added. By midday, all seven people hit with the charge had posted bond, typically set around $250.

The evening represented a milestone for Darien, which had never before conducted a DUI stop. In January, the police department received a $46,000 state grant for drunk driving enforcement. 

Officers had an initial chance learn the ropes in March, when they joined police at a checkpoint in Stamford. Plans were also laid for one in Darien in April, but driving rain shifted the location to an underpass in Stamford, making this the town's inaugural effort.

Saturday's checkpoint was abuzz with activity from about 11 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. the next morning, with officers, drivers, passengers, bystanders, and tow truck operators circulating around the roadway and surrounding lots.

Authorities set up cones and signage around a wide swath in the middle of the road, narrowing traffic down to one lane in each direction and allowing officers to flag passing cars down by hand. The scene was lit by floodlights from the Darien department's Truck 1 and lamps running off of gas-powered generators.

Among other requirements, police were obligated by law to post advance warning of the checkpoint in either direction and to provide a turn-off point before drivers were forced into the coned area.

"Our cone patterns, our generators, our stop signs, our placement and positioning in the road has all been approved ahead of time by the state's attorney's office, just so there's no question," Marron said. "We don't want to waste all this effort and the state's money to find out that we didn't dot our 'i's and cross our 't's."

Most of the officers on the scene were at least 10-year veterans of the force and had been to a number of different specialty schools, giving them a firm grounding in DUI enforcement. Police were also on the lookout for drivers under the influence of marijuana and PCP.

"The goal here is, number one, prevention; number two, awareness; and number three, to keep the roads safe," Marron said. He added that enforcement efforts such as Saturday's checkpoint were having an appreciable impact on drunk driving behaviors.

"The whole campaign—not just here, but nationwide—has, I think, made a difference as well. It's not as socially accepted to be driving under the influence, and I think people have plans in place to not do that," Marron said.

Continue reading "Darien Conducts First-Ever DUI Checkpoint" »

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June 08, 2010
  Police Log, June 8, 2010
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://republicanherald.com/news/police-log-june-8-2010-1.835224

2 suffer minor injuries in crash

BRANDONVILLE - Two people suffered minor injuries when the car they were in crashed on Route 339, about a half mile south of Brandonville in Mahanoy Township, at 11:40 p.m. Sunday.

State police at Frackville said Holly Reeves, 21, of Mahanoy City, was driving a 1989 Chevrolet Cavalier south when while rounding a curve entered the oncoming lane of traffic. The woman over reacted as she tried to get back into her lane, travel off the west side of the road and struck an embankment, troopers said.

The car then rolled over and came to a stop facing northeast in the southbound lane of travel, troopers said.

Reeves and her passenger - Joshua Mooney, 22, also of Mahanoy City - suffered minor injuries but refused medical treatment.

Brandonville firefighters and Shenandoah EMS assisted at the scene, troopers said, adding that Reeves will be cited for failing to wear her seatbelt.

4 arrested for thefts at Wal-Mart

SAINT CLAIR - Saint Clair police arrested four people and charged them with retail theft stemming from separate incidents at the Wal-Mart.

On June 1, police said Tiffany Cruz, 22, of 313 Cherry St., Saint Clair, was caught trying to steal 23 items with a total value of $38.99.

On Thursday, police said Erica Pagan, 28, of 4 S. Jardin St., Shenandoah, was caught stealing two items valued at $44.

Also on Thursday, police said John Nush Jr., 38, of 247 S. 4th St., Minersville, was charged after he was caught trying to steal eight items valued at $143.07.

That same day a 17-year-old Cressona girl was charged after she was caught stealing eight items valued at $46.11, police said.

Charges against all four were filed with Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon, police said.

No DUI arrests after 19 stopped

The North Central PA Regional Sobriety Checkpoint DUI Program reported 19 vehicles were contacted and detained during a Roving DUI Patrol conducted Saturday by two officers from two departments.

There were two drivers tested for DUI but no arrests were made for either DUI or underage drinking.

The officers did make nine traffic arrests, two criminal arrests and issued one seat belt citation and 13 warning notices.

Checkpoints to be conducted

The North Central Regional Sobriety Checkpoint DUI Taskforce announced that Sobriety Checkpoints and Roving DUI Patrols will be conducted now through Sunday along routes 61, 183, 901, 209, 1006, 1002, 309, 443, 895, 125,25, 924, 54 and any other roadway in Schuylkill County.

Travelers are reminded to call 911 if they suspect a drunk driver or to call, toll-free, 888-UNDER21 to report underage drinking.

Continue reading "Police Log, June 8, 2010" »

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June 08, 2010
  Checkpoint Helps Police Make Six DUI Arrests
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://darien.patch.com/articles/checkpoint-helps-police-make-six-dui-arrests-over-weekend

It was a busy weekend for DUI enforcement in Darien.

Between a first-ever checkpoint set up on Post Road and traffic stops elsewhere in town, six DUI arrests were made by the Darien Police Department in under eight hours. A seventh—the details of which were not immediately available—was carried out by Stamford police assisting at the checkpoint.

Below is the complete rundown of the arrests, based on information provided by Darien Police. All of the incidents occurred late Saturday night or Sunday morning, and unless otherwise noted, the charge issued was driving under the influence:

Christina Beale, 29, of Norwalk was stopped around 11:50 p.m. by police at the Post Road DUI checkpoint traveling eastbound in a 2000 Saab 9-3. She told officers she was coming from a party where she had consumed one drink, but police observed slurred speech, glassy eyes, and an odor of alcohol from Beale. After failing field sobriety tests, she was arrested and released on $250 bond pending a June 16 court date.

Claude Major, 45, of Stamford was stopped around 12:04 a.m. by police at the Post Road checkpoint traveling westbound in a 2002 Volvo S-60. He told police that he was coming home from a barbecue, where had consumed a few beers. Officers administered field sobriety tests, which Major failed. He was released on a promise to appear at a June 16 court date.

Guadalupe Partida, 29, of Norwalk was charged with DUI and failure to drive right after an officer saw her crossing the double yellow line four times traveling westbound on Tokeneke Road. When the officer stopped Partida's 2003 Ford Explorer around 2:19 a.m., Partida exhibited bloodshot eyes and other signs of intoxication. She signaled that she did not speak English well, but the officer spoke fluent Spanish and was able to administer field sobriety tests. When Partida failed, she was arrested and released on $1000 bond pending a June 16 court date. Police said her bond was unusually high owing to a 1998 arrest for entering the country illegally.

Jorge Gonzales, 47, of Stamford was stopped around 2:23 a.m by police at the Post Road checkpoint traveling westbound in a 2001 Honda Civic. He told police he was on his way home and that he had consumed a few drinks, prompting officers to conduct field sobriety tests. When Gonzales failed, he was arrested and released on $1000 bond pending a June 16 court date. Police said the unusually high bond was due to a prior DUI arrest in Port Chester, N.Y. from 2005.

Thomas Fawcett, 31, of Norwalk was stopped around 2:26 a.m. by police at the Post Road checkpoint traveling eastbound in a 2005 Volkswagen Jetta. When police asked Fawcett how he was doing, he reportedly responded, "Norwalk," raising the officers' suspicions. He told police he was coming home from work, but when he was administered field sobriety tests, Fawcett failed. He was arrested and released on $500 pending a June 16 court date.

Margaret Van Loan, 28, of Edgerton St. in Darien was arrested and charged with DUI and failure to drive right around 7:31 a.m. The incident began around 6:52 a.m., when police responded to a report of a loud party at a residence on Old Farm Road. A woman at the house told officers she had been struck in the right thigh by a Jeep—later identified as a 1995 Wrangler—leaving the driveway. Officers began checking the area, eventually observing a vehicle fitting the description making a wide right turn onto Tokeneke Road from Cliff Ave. and crossing the double yellow line. When police stopped the vehicle, officers detected a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on Van Loan, the driver. After failing field sobriety tests, Van Loan was arrested and released on $250 bond pending a June 16 court date.

Continue reading "Checkpoint Helps Police Make Six DUI Arrests" »

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June 08, 2010
  FHP to conduct Crestview DUI checkpoint
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.crestviewbulletin.com/news/crestview-10155-checkpoint-conduct.html

Crestview – The Florida Highway Patrol, in partnership with other law enforcement agencies, will conduct a sobriety DUI checkpoint on Friday beginning at  11 p.m.

The DUI checkpoint will on State Road 85 north of P.J. Adams Parkway will last until 2 a.m. Saturday.

During the operation, vehicles will be stopped to check for driver impairment and other violations of Florida law.

Should impairment be detected, roadside DUI testing will be performed on site. Warning devices will be placed in strategic locations for the safety and protection of the public.

“Through the use of Roadside DUI Safety Checkpoints, we hope to merge public education and enforcement to achieve a reduction in the deaths and injuries associated with impaired drivers,” an FHP press release states.

The Florida Highway Patrol encourages motorist not to drink and drive.

Please remind the public to dial *FHP (*347) if they see a driver who appears to be impaired.

Continue reading "FHP to conduct Crestview DUI checkpoint" »

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June 08, 2010
  Five charged with DUI in Pa. during sobriety checkpoint
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.herald-mail.com/?cmd=displaystory&story_id=246838&format=html

CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Five people were charged with driving under the influence during a sobriety DUI checkpoint conducted on U.S. 11 between Minnich and Cornertown roads Friday night and Saturday morning, Pennsylvania State Police said.

Troopers stopped 159 motorists between 11 p.m. Friday and 3 a.m. Saturday, police said. In addition to the DUI arrests, one person was charged with public drunkenness and disorderly conduct, police said.

Thirty-four warnings were issued for vehicle code infractions, including DUI, not wearing seat belts, not having driver’s licenses or registration cards, broken headlights and inspection violations, police said.

Continue reading "Five charged with DUI in Pa. during sobriety checkpoint" »

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June 07, 2010
  Bond set for Horry County Felony DUI suspect
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www2.scnow.com/scp/news/local/grand_strand/article/bond_set_for_horry_county_felony_dui_suspect/181225/

LORIS—A North Carolina man charged in a deadly DUI crash Thursday night in Horry County was issued a $500,000 bond.

According to the J Reuben Long Detention Center website, Timothy Wayne Fowler, 24, of Tabor City, NC was issued the bond and remains in jail.

According to the South Carolina Highway Patrol, Fowler was involved in a DUI crash around 10:00 p.m. Thursday night when his 1999 Kia SUV was traveling northbound on Hwy 701 when he over corrected causing the vehicle to enter the southbound lane and collide with a 2008 Chevrolet car, killing the driver.

Horry County Coroner Robert Edge identified the driver as Robert C. Byerly, 56, of Loris. 

Edge says Byerly died at Loris Hospital from injuries he suffered in the DUI accident.

Fowler was charged with felony DUI resulting in death.

The Highway Patrol continues to investigate.

Continue reading "Bond set for Horry County Felony DUI suspect" »

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June 07, 2010
  Tehama County DUI crackdown nets eight over holiday weekend
Posted By Coffey and Coffey
Continue reading "Tehama County DUI crackdown nets eight over holiday weekend" »

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June 07, 2010
  Deputies: Retired NYPD cop drives wrong way on parkway, busted for DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.marconews.com/news/2010/jun/07/deputies-retired-nypd-cop-drives-wrong-way-parkway/

A retired New York City police officer who implied a deputy should let him go because he was a retired cop was arrested Saturday after DUI on Estero Parkway.

Jack Dicristofalo, 68, of Fort Myers, was charged with DUI. He was released hours later from Lee County Jail after posting $750 bond.

According to a Lee County Sheriff’s Office DUI report:

A deputy saw a car going west on the parkway in the east lanes. The car turned north onto U.S. 41 South and drifted back and forth over the centerline. The car began to slow down and nearly stopped in the middle of the road.

The deputy stopped the car near Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41 South. Dicristofalo “immediately showed me his retired NYPD badge and told me that he lives next to a deputy.” During DUI field sobriety tests, two of which he took and failed, he pointed out a variety of law enforcement stickers on his car and said he supported them financially, “implying that I should let him go because he was a retired cop,” the deputy wrote.

He denied any medical issues except for having a hip replacement and getting beaten on the job, so he could not perform several of the tests “even if he was sober.”

He admitted to having had “a few drinks.”

Continue reading "Deputies: Retired NYPD cop drives wrong way on parkway, busted for DUI" »

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June 07, 2010
  State drops DUI charge against John Mica's daughter
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/breakingnews/os-dui-john-mica-daughter-dropped-20100607,0,5916450.story

Prosecutors have dropped a DUI charge against D'Anne Leigh Mica, daughter of U.S. Rep. John Mica, records released today show.

The younger Mica was arrested earlier this year on a charge of DUI after Maitland police said she was stopped with a blood-alcohol content more than twice the legal limit.

Why the DUI charge was dropped wasn't immediately clear.

But records show a judge agreed with her defense attorney that police made a bad stop when they pulled her over in January.

Records show the charge was dropped on June 2.

A police report shows that Mica, a 34-year-old public-relations executive, was driving east on Horatio Avenue, east of U.S. Highway 17-92, when her black sport-utility vehicle began drifting back and forth.

An officer stopped Mica and asked if she was OK. He noticed the smell of alcohol on her breath and that her eyes were glassy and bloodshot, he wrote in the report.

Mica of Maitland told the officer she was coming from Tom and Jerry's bar in Winter Park but that she was there only momentarily, according to the report.

A short time later, she said she was coming from a Mexican restaurant in downtown Orlando and admitted drinking a couple of vodka cocktails, the report states.

The officer asked her to take DUI-sobriety tests. She failed after she was unable to keep her balance, started one test too soon and misunderstood the instructions for a second test, according to the report.

The officer administered two breath tests. One revealed that Mica's blood-alcohol level was 0.192 percent. The second time, it was 0.198 percent. The legal limit is 0.08 percent.

This is a breaking story. Check back later for updates.

Continue reading "State drops DUI charge against John Mica's daughter" »

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June 07, 2010
  Police pull driver from canal, cite him for DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.fox12idaho.com/Global/story.asp?S=12604895

BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Police came to the rescue of a driver who crashed into an irrigation canal near Burley, but left him with a DUI citation.

Idaho State police say 20-year-old Gerardo Huerta-Flores Jerome sped through a work zone on I-84 around dawn Sunday, before veering off the road and rolling over into the canal.

Trooper James Kilton was traveling the opposite direction and saw some of the DUI crash. Police say he waded to the submerged car and pulled the driver to the safety of the canal bank.

Huerta-Flores was taken to St. Luke's Magic Valley Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries.

The episode ended with police citing him for allegedly DUI.

Continue reading "Police pull driver from canal, cite him for DUI" »

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June 07, 2010
  Ariz. high court to rule in case on DUI blood test
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.kold.com/Global/story.asp?S=12604918

PHOENIX (AP) - The Arizona Supreme Court plans to rule Monday on a case involving what requirements police face for getting a blood sample from a DUI suspect

At issue in the DUI case is whether officers lacking a search warrant for a blood sample must obtain clear consent from a DUI suspect. An alternative is whether state law implies consent by a person if there's probable cause of a violation.

The case from Phoenix involves a man who apparently didn't object when officers took a blood sample while in a police DUI van.

Continue reading "Ariz. high court to rule in case on DUI blood test" »

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June 07, 2010
  Miami police officers hit by driver
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

When Miami police Sergeants Robert Laurenceau and Orlando Villaverde helped take a robbery suspect into custody near Allapattah in Saturday's wee hours, they didn't know the biggest threat to their lives could be a 61-year-old woman DUI through the Allapattah neighborhood.

According to the Miami Police Department, Mary Lindsay plowed her 1999 Ford Taurus into Laurenceau, Villaverde and the adjacent police car near the corner of Northwest 41st Street and 17th Avenue.

Workers at the Ribs on Deck restaurant, just south of the corner, had just finished closing up for Friday night when police began setting up a perimeter to catch a robbery suspect nearby.

Soon after, they heard a DUI crash and screaming.

The officers, they said, were in the street.

The officers, both sergeants, were taken immediately to Jackson Memorial Hospital's Ryder Trauma Center.

Police said the 35-year-old Laurenceau, an officer for 16 years, suffered injuries to his head, possibly his spinal cord and was in recovery Saturday evening after several hours of surgery. Villaverde, 45 and with the department for 20 years, was discharged Saturday afternoon after suffering broken ribs and a broken clavicle.

Lindsay was charged with two counts of driving under the influence; DUI with serious bodily injuries; and DUI property damage. She was booked Saturday morning, and released on a $12,000 bond Saturday at 4:55 p.m.



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/06/1665810/miami-police-officers-hit-by-driver.html#ixzz0qCQAzllb
Continue reading "Miami police officers hit by driver" »

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June 06, 2010
  Man Hits Downtown Building, Arrested on 3rd DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.ktul.com/news/stories/0610/743274.html

Tulsa - Police arrest a man on numerous criminal complaints after he hits a downtown Tulsa building.

Officers were assigned to the call around 11:00 p.m. Saturday night. A dispatcher told the responding officer that a car had hit the main Post Office building on its northwest corner along East 2nd St. He noticed a large hole in the building and continued on to where the suspect's vehicle was reported to be parked.

The officer found the car and identified the driver as 54-year-old Henry Cobb. The DUI arrest report states that Cobb had the smell of alcohol on him and that he was staggering around.



A Tulsa county deputy and the officer attempted to give him a DUI sobriety test but he refused. Cobb said that he "probably would not pass the test."

He was arrested and taken to Tulsa County jail on numerous complaints that include: leaving the scene of a property-damage accident, driving on suspended license, and FelonyDUI. Court records show that he has been convicted on two previous DUI charges.

All total, his bond amounts to nearly $20,000.
Continue reading "Man Hits Downtown Building, Arrested on 3rd DUI" »

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June 06, 2010
  3 DUI arrests in OP saturation patrol
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2010/06/3-dui-arrests-in-op-saturation-patrol.html

From OPPD: The Overland Park, Kansas Police Department conducted a DUI Saturation Patrol on Friday, June 4, 2010. The DUI Saturation Patrol was conducted with the intent to reduce alcohol related auto accidents and discourage impaired driving. The DUI Saturation Patrol was enforced between 11:00 PM and 3:00 AM. Please review the statistical results:

3 - DUI arrest
7 - Drivers tested for DUI
13 - Hazardous moving violations issued
4 - Speeding
8 - Other tickets issued
5 - Safety Belts (Adults)
1 - Other arrest
31 - Total vehicles stopped



Read more: http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2010/06/3-dui-arrests-in-op-saturation-patrol.html#ixzz0q7bdg96R
Continue reading "3 DUI arrests in OP saturation patrol" »

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June 06, 2010
  Menifee checkpoint nets five DUI arrests, one stolen vehicle
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.myvalleynews.com/story/48431/

MENIFEE - Five people were arrested on suspicion of DUI and one stolen vehicle was recovered at a checkpoint in Menifee, a sheriff's sergeant said today.

Starting about 6 p.m. Saturday, officers screened 3,330 vehicles at the DUI checkpoint, Sgt. Dan Lingo said.

Officers gave DUI field sobriety tests to 27 drivers and arrested five. Fifty motorists were cited for lacking valid drivers licenses, four motorists were cited for child safety seat violations and 54 vehicles were towed, Lingo said.

Details about the stolen vehicle officers found during the DUI checkpoint were not released.

The checkpoint wrapped up about 2 a.m.

Funding for the checkpoint was provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration through the state Office of Traffic Safety.

Continue reading "Menifee checkpoint nets five DUI arrests, one stolen vehicle" »

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June 06, 2010
  Justin Bieber Arrested For DUI?!
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.reelempire.com/news/94-music/2496-justin-bieber-arrested-for-dui

Justin Bieber arrested for DUI! Man, you've got to love the tabloids. They'll make up anything to sell there magazines. Yesterday, they web was flooded with reports that "Gossip Girl" star Chace Crawford was arrested for DUI. The difference between that story and this one regarding Justin Bieber is the Chace Crawford one was true.

 
This morning, major search engines were bombarded with people looking for answers as to why 16-year-old Justin Bieber was arrested. For those of you who are still searching, look no further because we have the answer. The news involving the pop-sensations DUI arrest is a complete rumor. We came across dozens of websites reporting that Justin was arrested for a DUI. This is completely false! Even it this were true, I still wouldn't buy it. I mean, a sweet kid like Justin driving under the influence? Come on now!
 
So for those Bieber fans out there who went into panic mode after seeing the headlines regarding Justin Bieber's arrest can relax. Again, this is just one of the many stories that have been made up about a celebrity this year merely for tabloids to sell their magazines.
Continue reading "Justin Bieber Arrested For DUI?!" »

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June 05, 2010
  Man Escapes Orange Co. Deputies' Custody
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Local/2010/5/24/man_escapes_orange_county_deputies_custody.html

ORLANDO -- Around 11 a.m. Monday, Orange County deputies and Orlando police surrounded a three-block radius near Orlando Regional Medical Center.

They were looking for a man who attacked two deputies and escaped from the hospital while receiving medical treatment.

The whole incident started nearly 12 hours earlier when deputies pulled Randy Nusati over for a Orange County DUI.

Nusati fought back, but was eventually taken to jail.

While at the jail, he told authorities that he swallowed drugs and needed medical attention.

"For medical reasons, the doctor requested that the handcuffs be removed," said Susan Soto, Orange County Sheriff’s Office.

After nearly three hours of searching, deputies finally found the suspect in an industrial area where he was hiding.

Brad Coolidge works right next to the area where the suspect was caught.

He said the whole search nearly brought his business to a halt.

"As our trucks left the yard, each one had to be stopped and the DUI driver had to get out,” Coolidge said. “Officers did a search and then they would let them proceed."

Deputies said the suspect is once again in the hospital being treated for not only his previous DUI injuries, but also dog bites.

Two guards are now in charge of making sure he doesn't escape again.

Deputies did not immediately release Nusati's name because they were unsure of who he really is.

Officials said that he was booked into the Orange County Jail under a fake name.

Deputies were able to use fingerprint matches from other states to identify him.

Nusati is currently looking at charges of DUI, resisting arrest, and attacking a law enforcement officer.

Continue reading "Man Escapes Orange Co. Deputies' Custody " »

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June 05, 2010
  Andrew Thomas Gallo Can't Get Fair Trial in Angels Country, Claims His Lawyer
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://blogs.ocweekly.com/navelgazing/crime-sex/andrew-thomas-gallo-adenhart-t/

The ORANGE COUNTY DUI attorney for Andrew Thomas Gallo, the 23-year-old San Gabriel resident facing second-degree murder and other charges in the DUI crash that killed Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two others, has filed a motion to move the trial out of Orange County.

adenhart.jpg
The late Nick Adenhart
The Orange County Register has the scoop.

The 30-page motion argues that an impartial jury cannot be found "so long as that trial (is) held in view of the Big A."

The District Attorney's Office and a DUI lawyer representing the families of the victims oppose moving the trial, according to Register court reporter Larry Welborn.

Superior Court Judge Richard F. Toohey has scheduled a July 16 hearing on the motion. That's about two weeks before the trial is to begin.

Gallo's Orange County DUI attorney, wrote Welborn an email after filing the motion that stated, "To the rest of the nation, Nick Adenhart was 1 of 750 Major League Baseball players, but to residents of Orange County, he was 1 of 25 Angels. Bottom line: You can't kill an Angel and expect to receive a fair trial in Orange County."

Rubio added that the news coverage of the tragedy "has been pervasive, continuous and hostile."

Hours after Adenhart pitched six shutout innings for the Angels on April 9, 2009, he was riding in a Mitsubishi Eclipse driven by 20-year-old former Cal State Fullerton cheerleader Courtney Stewart when the car was broadsided by Gallo's minivan.

Fullerton Police later said Gallo ran a red light--and had a blood alcohol level that was more than three times the legal DUI limit. He also had a prior DUI conviction.

Adenhart, Stewart and 25-year-old passenger Henry Pearson were killed, while fourth Eclipse occupant Jonathan Wilhite, a 24-year-old former Cal State Fullerton Titans catcher, suffered what doctors called internal decapitation. He is still recovering from his injuries.

Gallo has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him. If he is convicted on all counts, he could get 50 years to life in state prison.
Continue reading "Andrew Thomas Gallo Can't Get Fair Trial in Angels Country, Claims His Lawyer" »

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June 05, 2010
  Man arrested for DUI after car knocks over utility pole
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.beatricedailysun.com/news/local/article_cdd22ab8-7053-11df-8a7b-001cc4c03286.html

A Beatrice man was arrested late Thursday night for DUI when the car he was allegedly driving struck a utility pole in the 1800 block of Lincoln Street.

James R. Cramer, 26, was cited for several offenses including DUI of alcohol, open alcohol container, no operators license, refusal to submit to a chemical test and false reporting.

According to police reports, Cramer was traveling westbound on Lincoln Street when he struck a pole on the north side of the street. The impact of Cramer’s car sheered the pole off causing it to fall on top of the car. The car was a total loss.

According to the police report, when officers arrived on the scene, Cramer was sitting on the curb next to the car. The windows to the vehicle were shattered and the airbags were deployed.

When questioned, Cramer told police that he wasn’t driving the car, which was determined to be false reporting.

Cramer also told police that the car he was driving belonged to his girlfriend, which police later confirmed.

Neighbors gathered outside their houses Thursday night as police attempted to clean up the DUI accident. None of the neighbors witnessed the accident, but a few reported hearing it from inside their homes. 

Beatrice Police Lt. Mike Oliver said Cramer was complaining of an injured knee. A preliminary breath test showed that Cramer had a blood alcohol level of .167, more than twice the legal limit to drive.

Cramer was taken directly to the Gage County Detention Center where bond was set at $5,000. Cramer has a previous DUI conviction.

Continue reading "Man arrested for DUI after car knocks over utility pole" »

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June 05, 2010
  Newport Beach DUI Attorney
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/06/05/1214031/kitsap-county-tacoma-driver-injured.html

The State Patrol reported that a 38-year-old Tacoma woman suspected of DUI was injured in a traffic accident early Saturday morning in Kitsap County.

The DUI crash happened shortly after midnight four miles south of Poulsbo on state Route 3 just north of Trigger Avenue. According to the release, the woman was driving a 1988 Mercury Cougar southbound on SR 3 from SR 308 at a high rate of speed. The driver lost control of the vehicle, slid into a ditch, then re-entered the highway where it crashed into a 2010 Toyota Tacoma.

The Tacoma woman was transported to Harrison Medical Center in Bremerton with head injuries and possible broken ribs. No further information on her condition is available at this time. The Toyota driver, a 23-year-old man from Longview, Texas, was not injured in the collision, the Patrol said. He was reported to be wearing a seat belt. It is unknown if the woman was wearing one.

The Mercury was totaled in the collision and the Toyota, which was damaged on the right side, was able to be driven from the scene.

The Patrol said excessive speed and DUI are believed to be the causes of the accident and DUI charges are pending against the Tacoma driver.



Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/06/05/1214031/kitsap-county-tacoma-driver-injured.html#ixzz0q0PGqNWO
Continue reading "Newport Beach DUI Attorney" »

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June 05, 2010
  DUI Attorney Orange County
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.modbee.com/2010/06/05/1195870/sacto-9-1-1-warning-came-too-late.html

Ignoring a text message may have resulted in a DUI arrest for one woman Friday, according to police reports.

The Sacramento Police Department set up an evening DUI checkpoint on Marysville Boulevard at Harris Avenue as part of its "Live Beyond Graduation" campaign.

A woman, who was not identified, was detained as a result of DUI evaluation, police reported.

Call The Bee's Carlos Alcalá, (916) 321-1987.

The police used the woman's cell phone to call a friend to pick up her dog, which was in the vehicle she had been driving.

While using the phone, officers came across a text message warning of "DUI checkpoints in the area." The woman was arrested.

Continue reading "DUI Attorney Orange County " »

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June 05, 2010
  Real Housewives Season Finale Moments - One Star Arrested on DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.nationalledger.com/artman/publish/article_272632190.shtml

One Real Housewives of New York star was arrested this week, just in time for a little publicity bump for the wild season finale. Newcomer Sonja Morgan has been slapped with a DUI charge after allegedly running a stop sign in her car at about 2 a.m. in South Hampton, NY.

Real Housewives Season Finale Moments - One Star Arrested on DUI.
Real Housewives Season Finale Moments - One Star Arrested on DUI.

Reports claims she failed a DUI field sobriety test and then refused a breathalyzer. Police took her to jail and she will now face DUI charges in court.

***

She now joins Kelly Bensimon (pictured) in the line up of Real Housewives with mug criminal shots.

More from the show - The season finale for the Real Housewives of New York City contained a number of outrageous things, according to Buddy TV writer Lynn DeVries.

She has a review of the episode with some of the more outrageous moments.
Continue reading "Real Housewives Season Finale Moments - One Star Arrested on DUI " »

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June 05, 2010
  Bay Area man gets 9th DUI conviction in 12 years
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_15234304?nclick_check=1

REDWOOD CITY, Calif.—A San Francisco Bay area man is facing up to seven years in prison following his ninth conviction for DUI.

Reynaldo Esquivel, of East Palo Alto, pleaded no contest Wednesday to DUI. His blood-alcohol level was .25, more than three times the legal limit, when he was pulled over in December.

Prosecutors say the 43-year-old Esquivel also was driving without a license because of the eight previous DUI he racked up over a 12-year period.

The California Assembly approved a bill this week that would allow judges to revoke the licenses of repeat DUI drivers for 10 years instead of the current 3-year penalty.

Esquivel's lawyer, Jeff Hayden, says the measure would not prevent people like his client from getting behind the wheel after their licenses have been revoked.

 

 

 

Continue reading "Bay Area man gets 9th DUI conviction in 12 years" »

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June 05, 2010
  Cop walks as DUI charges dropped in fatal '07 crash
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.suntimes.com/news/24-7/2354708,thanksgiving-day-crash-charges-dropped-060410.article

Erick Lagunas' family came to court Friday morning clinging to the slimmest of hopes.

But their 2½-year quest for justice ended in bitter tears, as the Chicago Police officer they say killed Lagunas and his friend, Miguel Flores, in a Thanksgiving Day 2007 DUI crash walked out of the 26th and California courthouse a free man.

"It's a joke -- they say we can continue with a civil suit," said Mayra Lagunas, 22, Erick Lagunas' cousin. "But no amount of money is ever going to bring Erick back."

Cook County prosecutors met privately with the Lagunas family Friday morning, gently telling them they had no choice but to drop the aggravated DUI and reckless homicide charges against officer John Ardelean. Prosecutors said their case fell apart after Cook County Judge Thomas Gainer Jr. threw out key evidence against Ardelean in late April.

The Lagunas family couldn't stand to be in the courtroom when the case was officially dismissed. The family -- knowing what was coming -- said they couldn't bear to look at the police officer's face.

A few moments later, Ardelean -- wearing dark sunglasses and surrounded by four beefy men in casual clothing -- walked briskly down the courthouse steps. Reporters barked questions at him, but he said nothing and offered no hint of his feelings.

Tom Needham, Ardelean's attorney, said his client's silence shouldn't be mistaken for indifference.

"He's always been upset and distraught and completely understanding of the emotion and anger on the other side of this case," Needham said. "But he's always insisted he didn't commit a crime that night."

Prosecutors made two attempts to prove that Ardelean did. After the two-vehicle fatal crash Nov. 22 in Roscoe Village, Ardelean was charged with misdemeanor DUI -- later upgraded to a felony. But those charges were dismissed when Cook County Judge Don Panarese ruled there was "no indication" Ardelean, who was off-duty at the time, was drunk. Prosecutors reinstated charges after saying they had a lengthy surveillance videotape showing Ardelean drinking five shots and other drinks at a North Side bar shortly before the crash.

Prosecutors also suggested in pretrial hearings that police the night of the crash turned a blind eye to Ardelean's intoxication. Among other things, he wasn't arrested or given a Breathalyzer until seven hours after the crash. But Gainer ruled in April that the supervising officer who ultimately made the arrest didn't have strong enough evidence to do so. Gainer's ruling also suppressed key blood-alcohol evidence.

That ruling sparked a furious reaction, resulting in the arrest of three of Flores' relatives after they scuffled with sheriff's deputies.

Flores' relatives didn't show up Friday. Lagunas' family said that's because the Flores family knew how the case would end.

In a written statement, prosecutors said they'd done "extensive and in-depth" research but found there weren't sufficient grounds to appeal Gainer's ruling or continue with the case.

Ardelean is currently on administrative leave and has been relieved of his police powers, pending the outcome of an internal affairs investigation, the Chicago Police Department said in a statement.

Continue reading "Cop walks as DUI charges dropped in fatal '07 crash " »

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June 04, 2010
  STATE v. BLAIR
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.leagle.com/unsecure/page.htm?shortname=inflco20100603190

STATE OF FLORIDA, et al., Petitioners,
v.
ARTHUR BLAIR, Respondent.

No. SC09-1407.

Supreme Court of Florida.

June 3, 2010.

Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and John m. Conway, Assistant Public Defender, Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, West Palm Beach, Florida, for Petitioner.

Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida, Celia Terenzio and Myra J. Fried, Assistant Attorneys General, West Palm Beach, Florida, for Respondent.

PER CURIAM.

This case is before the Court for review of the decision of the Fourth District Court of Appeal in Blair v. State, 15 So. 3d 758 (Fla. 4th DCA 2009). The district court certified that its decision is in direct conflict with the decision of the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Ricks v. State, 961 So. 2d 1093 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007), as to whether a trial court may order pretrial detention based solely on a finding that the defendant's failure to appear was willful without determining whether conditions of release are appropriate as delineated in section 907.041, Florida Statutes (2008). We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const.

FACTS

The facts of the underlying case are set out in the Fourth District's opinion in Blair:

The trial court ordered petitioner, Arthur Blair, held without bond after he failed to appear for a court date on a felony DUI charge. Blair had never been arrested on the felony charge and he did not receive notice of the court date. Blair had been arrested for misdemeanor DUI and appeared at a scheduled court date for that charge. At that time, he was advised that the court appearance had been cancelled and that the misdemeanor case had been nolle prossed. Unbeknownst to Blair, the state had filed an information charging felony DUI, but the uncontested evidence at the bond hearing showed that Blair did not receive notice of the felony charge.
The trial court did not find the failure to appear to be willful. The record is devoid of evidence to suggest that petitioner willfully failed to appear. Pretrial detention may not be ordered based on a failure to appear unless the court finds that the failure to appear was willful. See Lee v. State, 956 So. 2d 1292 (Fla. 4th DCA 2007); Johnson v. Jenne, 913 So. 2d 740 (Fla. 4th DCA 2005); Winters v. Jenne, 765 So. 2d 54 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999).
Further, the trial court improperly ordered pretrial detention without finding that "no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons, assure the presence of the accused at trial, or assure the integrity of the judicial process." Art. I, §14, Fla. Const. A pretrial detention order must contain findings of fact and conclusions of law showing that the constitutional and statutory criteria for pretrial detention are met. See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.132(c)(2); § 907.041(4)(i), Fla. Stat. (2008).

Id. at 759. The Fourth District then certified conflict between its decision in Blair and the Fifth District's decision in Ricks. We accepted jurisdiction. [ 1 ] The issue posed in the present case constitutes a pure question of law and is subject to the de novo standard of review. Insko v. State, 969 So. 2d 992, 997 (Fla. 2007).

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Our criminal justice system is based on the presumption that every person charged with a crime is innocent until proven guilty. See, e.g., Coffin v. United States, 156 U.S. 432, 453 (1895). Article I, section 14 of Florida's Constitution gives effect to the presumption of innocence and addresses pretrial detention and release:

Unless charged with a capital offense or an offense punishable by life imprisonment and the proof of the guilt is evident or the presumption is great, every person charged with a crime of violation of municipal or county ordinance shall be entitled to pretrial release on reasonable conditions. If no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons, assure the presence of the accused at trial, or assure the integrity of the judicial process, the accuse may be detained.

Id. This sentiment also resonates in Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.131, which states in relevant portion:

(a) Right to Pretrial Release. Unless charged with a capital offense or an offense punishable by life imprisonment and the proof of guilt is evident or the presumption is great, every person charged with a crime or violation of municipal or county ordinance shall be entitled to pretrial release on reasonable conditions. . . . If no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons, assure the presence of the accused at trial, or assure the integrity of the judicial process, the accused may be detained.

Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.131(a). Based on the above, it is clear that there is a presumption in favor of release. In keeping with the presumption in favor of release, Florida's Legislature provided comprehensive guidelines for when an original application for bail may be denied as codified in section 907.041, Florida Statutes (2008). Before a trial court may order pretrial detention, one of the statutory bases must be satisfied. Section 907.041(4)(c)(7) lists criteria that must be used in making a pretrial detention determination, which, in relevant portion, provides:

(c) The court may order pretrial detention if it finds a substantial probability, based on a defendant's past and present patterns of behavior, the criteria in s. 903.046, and any other relevant facts, that any of the following circumstances exists:
. . . .
7. The defendant has violated one or more conditions of pretrial release or bond for the offense currently before the court and the violation, in the discretion of the court, supports a finding that no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons or assure the presence of the accused at trial.

§ 907.041(4)(c)(7), Fla. Stat. (2008). Additionally, section 907.041 also prescribes a set of procedures relating to pretrial detention. Some of those procedures have also been codified in Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.132, which states in relevant portion, "The court's pretrial detention order shall be based solely on evidence produced at the hearing and shall contain findings of fact and conclusions of law to support it. The order shall be made either in writing or orally on the record." Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.132(c)(2). However, there is no suggestion in either section 907.041 or in the procedural rule that a trial court's finding of the defendant's willful failure to appear alone is sufficient to order pretrial detention.

In the past, Florida courts generally held that "if there is a failure to appear, the court may simply commit a defendant to custody without determining whether conditions of release are appropriate. However, implicit in the rule is that the failure to appear occurred after reasonable notice, and was willful." Wilson v. State, 669 So. 2d 312, 313 (Fla. 5th DCA 1996). Similarly, the Fourth District applied this general rule Bradshaw v. Jenne, 754 So. 2d 109 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000).

In recent years, this Court has receded from the general rule that a trial court may order pretrial detention based solely on the defendant's willful failure to appear. In State v. Paul, 783 So. 2d 1042 (Fla. 2001), we accepted discretionary review to address whether a trial court has the inherent authority to deny a subsequent application for bail after a defendant breaches a bond condition, or whether the trial court's discretion to deny a subsequent application for bail is circumscribed by the parameters established by the Legislature in section 907.041. We adopted the Fourth District's reasoning as explained in Paul v. Jenne, 728 So. 2d 1167 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999), stating:

[T]he court's authority to deny bond pending trial is circumscribed by the provisions of Florida Statute section 907.041. The legislature has specifically delineated and narrowly limited those circumstances under which bond may be denied. We have no difficulty divining the legislative intent to curtail the court's power to deny bail, except in certain instances, in light of the constitutionally guaranteed right to bail. To effectuate its express policy of assuring the detention of "those persons posing a threat to the safety of the community or the integrity of the judicial process," the legislature enacted a pretrial detention statute which sets forth a comprehensive list of conditions that will qualify a defendant for detention without bail. By providing clear and reasonable guidelines for courts to follow in considering denial of this basic and fundamental right, the legislature may very well have been motivated by a desire to achieve uniformity and fairness in judicial determinations of bail entitlement, as well as to provide trial courts with a means of identifying persons whose criminal histories and patterns of behavior signal a danger to society.

Paul, 783 So. 2d at 1051 (quoting Paul v. Jenne, 728 So. 2d at 1171-72).

Notwithstanding our decision in Paul, the Fifth District recently opined that a trial court may commit a defendant to custody based solely on the defendant's failure to appear without determining whether conditions of release are appropriate. See Ricks v. State, 961 So. 2d 1093 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007). The facts of Ricks, as set out in the Fifth District's opinion, are as follows:

The trial court issued a capias for petitioner's arrest after he failed to appear for his pre-trial conference. The capias provided that petitioner was to be held without bond. Petitioner subsequently surrendered himself voluntarily to the Orange County Jail. Petitioner then filed a motion to set aside the bond forfeiture and to reinstate the previously posted bond or, in the alternative, a motion to set a new bond. In his motion petitioner alleged "his non-appearance was not the product of a willful decision on his part to disobey the directive by this Court, but rather the product of an oversight and poor communication with the Office of the Public Defender." This motion, as well as petitioner's renewed motion to set a new bond, was denied without a hearing. The trial court's written order included the notation "multiple prior F.T.A.'s."

Id. at 1093. As a result, Ricks filed a petition for habeas corpus in the Fifth District. The Fifth District failed to rely on or even acknowledge existing precedent as set out in this Court's decision in Paul. Instead, the Fifth District relied on Wilson. [ 2 ] "Generally, if there is a failure to appear, the court may simply commit a defendant to custody without determining whether conditions of release are appropriate." Ricks, 961 So. 2d at 1093 (citing Wilson, 669 So. 2d at 313). "However, if a defendant alleges `a legitimate issue as to whether [his] failure to appear was knowing and willful,' a trial court is required to conduct a hearing to determine that issue." Ricks, 961 So. 2d at 1093 (quoting Wilson, 669 So. 2d at 313). The Fifth District concluded that Ricks' allegations did not present any legitimate issue—as to whether his failure to appear was willful or knowing—that would require the trial court to conduct a hearing. As a result, the Fifth District denied Ricks' petition for habeas corpus. Id. at 1094.

In the instant case, the Fourth District properly relied on our decision in Paul. The Fourth District found that the trial court failed to make a finding that Blair's failure to appear was willful and further found as follows:

[T]he trial court improperly ordered pretrial detention without finding that "no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons, assure the presence of the accused at trial, or assure the integrity of the judicial process." Art. I, §14 Fla. Const. A pretrial detention order must contain findings of fact and conclusions of law showing that the constitutional and statutory criteria for pretrial detention are met. See Fla. R. Crim. P. 3.132(c)(2); § 907.041(4)(i), Fla. Stat. (2008).

Blair, 15 So. 3d at 759. In its opinion, the Fourth District explained:

Although a trial court has discretion in setting reasonable pretrial release conditions, a trial court's authority to order pretrial detention is circumscribed by the state constitution and relevant statutes. Paul makes clear that these requirements apply even where a defendant has violated pretrial release conditions, such as through a failure to appear. 783 So. 2d at 1051. Paul effectively overruled the majority's analysis in Bradshaw, which permitted a court to order pretrial detention following a finding of a willful failure to appear without also finding that the constitutional and statutory criteria for pretrial detention were met.
The court in Ricks v. State, 961 So. 2d 1093, 1093-94 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007), appears to have relied on pre-Paul cases to reach the same conclusion as Bradshaw, that a court may order pretrial detention based solely on a finding of a willful failure to appear "without determining whether conditions of release are appropriate." Id. (citing Wilson v. State, 669 So. 2d 312, 313 (Fla. 5th DCA 1996)). We certify conflict with this aspect of Ricks.

Blair, 15 So. 3d at 760. We agree with the Fourth District's conclusion that the trial court failed to find that Blair's failure to appear was willful. After a careful review of the bond hearing transcript, it does not appear that the trial court ever made such a determination, either expressly or impliedly. Although the trial court did conduct a bond hearing, it failed to determine whether there were reasonable conditions of pretrial release. The evidence presented at the bond hearing established that Blair attempted to attend the misdemeanor DUI court date, but was told that the case had been nolle prossed. He never received notice that the case had been refiled as a felony DUI or of the new court date. Blair also testified that he used his ex-wife's address because his job as a road worker precluded him from maintaining a stable address. The trial court simply surmised, "Address on the PC is 129 Swain Boulevard. The address on the booking sheet is 129 Swain Boulevard. Be held without bond. That's where the notices were sent. Now we need another date." The bond hearing transcript is devoid of any language, either express or implied, indicating that the trial court's decision to order pretrial detention in this case was based on the statutory criteria as codified in section 907.041 and as required by our decision in Paul.

Accordingly, we approve the Fourth District's decision in Blair, and disapprove the Fifth District's contrary holding in Ricks.

It is so ordered.

QUINCE, C.J., and PARIENTE, LEWIS, CANADY, POLSTON, LABARGA, and PERRY, JJ., concur.

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND IF FILED, DETERMINED.

1. By the time this case reached this Court, the issue was moot. Blair filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus after the trial court ordered pretrial detention. The Fourth District granted Blair's petition for writ of habeas corpus by order on June 29, 2009. Blair, 15 So. 3d at 760 n.1. On July 9, 2009, the trial court reconsidered its decision to detain Blair in light of the Fourth District's opinion and determined that Blair could be released on his own recognizance. Moreover, on August 17, 2009, the trial court granted Blair's Motion to Discharge on speedy trial grounds. A separate State appeal of the order of discharge is currently pending in the Fourth District. However, the mootness doctrine does not destroy our jurisdiction in this case. Because this issue is capable of repetition, yet may evade review, we have the authority to retain jurisdiction and decide the issue on the merits under the public exception doctrine. See Cook v. City of Jacksonville, 823 So. 2d 86, 87 (Fla. 2002); Gregory v. Rice, 727 So. 2d 251 (Fla. 1999).
2. Our decision in Paul did not specifically refer to the Fifth District's decision in Wilson. Rather, it referred to the cases as "pre-Paul." However, Paul in effect overruled Wilson.

This copy provided by Leagle, Inc.

Continue reading "STATE v. BLAIR" »

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June 04, 2010
  Memorial Day weekend DUI arrests up
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.appeal-democrat.com/news/dui-95651-weekend-arrests.html

Driving under the influence arrests were up over the Memorial Day weekend, police said.

The Avoid the Nine campaign netted 29 arrests of people DUI of alcohol or drugs between 12:01 a.m. Friday and midnight Monday, May 28-31. There were 20 DUI arrests in the same period in 2009 and 30 in 2008.

Law enforcement officers in Yuba, Sutter and Colusa counties set up one sobriety checkpoint, deployed several DUI saturation patrols and had several officers on routine patrol focus special attention on possible impaired drivers.

Additional anti-DUI efforts will take place on the Fourth of July weekend and an 18-day campaign starting in August through the Labor Day weekend, police said

Continue reading "Memorial Day weekend DUI arrests up" »

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June 04, 2010
  318 DUI arrests made over holiday weekend
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

— Law enforcement across the region arrested a total of 318 motorists on suspicion of DUI over the Memorial Day weekend, slightly more than last year, according to data released Wednesday.

The “Avoid the 14” DUI campaign included six sobriety checkpoints and 25 DUI saturation patrols by the county’s 14 participating law enforcement agencies.

Last year, 306 DUI arrests were made during the same weekend period — from 12:01 a.m. Friday through midnight Monday.

While no DUI-related fatalities were reported over the weekend, alcohol or drugs were blamed for several major injury crashes, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

Similar zero-tolerance DUI enforcements are being planned for the Fourth of July and Labor Day weekends.

Continue reading "318 DUI arrests made over holiday weekend" »

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June 04, 2010
  Jacobson gets 36 years for DUI deaths of Connecticut librarians
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.denverpost.com/breakingnews/ci_15229084

Sandra Jacobson, convicted on nine counts related to the Jan. 28, 2009 DUI traffic deaths of two women taking a cab to Denver International Airport, today was sentenced to 36 years in prison.

Jacobson, whose BAC was estimated at more than three times the legal DUI limit when her truck hit a cab causing the deaths of librarians Kate McClelland, 71, and Kathy Krasniewicz, 54, and injuring cabdriver Nejmudean Abdusalam, was convicted in April.

Jacobson was handcuffed and wearing a orange and white jail uniform during the sentencing hearing. She was led out of the Denver District Courtroom by deputies and will later be taken to a Department of Corrections diagnostic center and then to prison.

Prosecutors alleged that a drunken Jacobson sped along at more than 80 mph, lost control of her pickup, swerved across two lanes, clipped the van and drove off.

Jacobson first told police that she'd downed cold medicine, and then insisted she was sober and driving the speed limit, momentarily lost control of her truck after her dog went for a Cheeto — possibly because the unseen taxi crashed into her — but never realized she'd made contact with another vehicle.

In Jacobson's version of events, she stopped a short time later at Denver International Airport to ship a puppy to her brother in Texas, then downed a "road pop" she'd inadvertently left in her truck days earlier. That road pop was a bottle of Vitamin Water laced with 99-proof banana schnapps.

A jury found her guilty on two counts of DUI vehicular homicide for the deaths of McClelland and Krasniewicz, and on two counts of careless driving causing death. She also was found guilty on a count of third-degree assault and a count of careless driving causing injury for the harm suffered by the cabdriver, guilty of two counts of leaving the scene of an accident. Guilty of DUI.

Continue reading "Jacobson gets 36 years for DUI deaths of Connecticut librarians" »

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June 04, 2010
  Suspected DUI driver runs SUV into tree in Mission Beach
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

— A suspected DUI driver was seriously injured early Friday morning and his passenger also was hurt when the man crashed his SUV into a tree, police said.

DUI Officers said the 24-year-old man was driving a Nissan Exterra southbound on Ingraham Street on the Sunset Cliffs ramp around 1:35 a.m. when he failed to negotiate the curve and drove off the road, striking the tree. The driver suffered serious injuries to his head and spine, police said. His 24-year-old passenger was also taken to the hospital, but the extent of his injuries were not disclosed.

Police said the driver will face felony DUI charges.

Continue reading "Suspected DUI driver runs SUV into tree in Mission Beach" »

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June 04, 2010
  NC man charged with felony DUI in Loris fatal accident
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.wect.com/Global/story.asp?S=12594486

LORIS, SC (WMBF) - A 24-year-old is now facing a felony DUI charge following a Thursday night accident that killed a 56-year-old man near Loris.

According to the South Carolina Highway Patrol, a 2008 Chevrolet car was driving southbound on Highway 701 when it collided with a 1999 Kia SUV traveling in the northbound lanes.

 DUI Investigators say the driver of the Kia, identified as Timothy Fowler, 24, of Tabor City, NC, made a pass going across the center line of the road. While attempting to correct his position on the roadway, he lost control of the vehicle and struck the Chevrolet.

The driver of the Chevrolet, identified by the Horry County Coroner's Office as Robert  C. Byerly, 56, died as a result of injuries sustained in the DUI accident. Coroner Robert Edge said Byerly was pronounced dead shortly upon arrival to Loris Community Hospital, despite wearing a seatbelt.

Fowler was charged by the South Carolina Highway Patrol with felony DUI and was booked into the J. Reuben Long Detention Center at 3 p.m. Friday.

Continue reading "NC man charged with felony DUI in Loris fatal accident" »

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June 04, 2010
  "Real Housewives" Sonja Morgan Arrested For DUI
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.rttnews.com/Content/EntertainmentNews.aspx?Section=2&Id=1325446&SM=1

RTTNews) -  "Real Housewives of New York " star Sonja Morgan has been slapped with a DUI charge after allegedly driving through a stop sign in South Hampton, NY.

According to a report from the New York Post , the 46-year-old was pulled over at just after 2:00 AM and refused a DUI breathalyzer test.

Morgan is the ex-wife of John Morgan, one of several heirs to the J.P. Morgan fortune. Before marrying into the famous family, Morgan reportedly worked as a restaurant hostess. She briefly became involved in the film industry, but was sued by a California based production company that claimed she backed out of a funding commitment after being served with divorce papers. A California grand jury awarded the company nearly $8 million in damages.

Morgan is currently working on a screenplay for a film that she says is similar to the work of Candace Bushwell, the figure behind Carrie Bradshaw from "Sex and the City."

The defendant in this case will need to hire an experienced Orange County DUI Attorney or an Orange County DUI Lawyer.

Continue reading ""Real Housewives" Sonja Morgan Arrested For DUI " »

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June 04, 2010
  DUI Charges Against Chicago Police Officer Dropped
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://cbs2chicago.com/wireapnewsil/Prosecutors.drop.DUI.2.1733504.html

CHICAGO (AP) ― All DUI charges have been dropped against a Chicago police officer accused of DUI and causing a crash that killed two men.

John Ardelean was charged with reckless homicide and felony DUI for the Thanksgiving 2007 crash that left 22-year-old Miguel Flores and 21-year-old Erick Lagunas dead.

A third man was injured.

Last month, a Cook County judge quashed Ardelean's DUI arrest and suppressed blood alcohol evidence. Prosecutors say that ruling left them unable to meet their burden of proof.

Family members of the two men say they're angry and disappointed.

The Chicago Police Department says an internal investigation of the crash is still open. The 36-year-old Ardelean is on administrative duty and has been relieved of police powers.

Continue reading "DUI Charges Against Chicago Police Officer Dropped" »

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June 01, 2010
  DUI suspect Accused of Stuffing Pot in Kids' Toy Bag
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.wboc.com/Global/story.asp?S=12574579

WILMINGTON, Del.- Delaware State Police say a 38-year-old Newark woman with her two young nieces in the car was arrested for DUI and a variety of other offenses during a weekend Click It or Ticket It traffic stop.

Alice VanDyke was charged with two counts of endangering the welfare of a child involving DUI, possession of marijuana, DUI, driving while suspended, failure to provide insurance and improper lane change. 

Police say the incident occurred about 12:20 a.m. Saturday when a trooper stopped a green Dodge Avenger for failing to maintain a traffic lane on Route 2 (Kirkwood Highway) near St. James Church Road in Wilmington.

VanDyke brought the car to a stop in a parking lot next to St. James Church Road and the trooper talked to the driver and noticed some empty beer cans on the front seat.

Two children, ages 4 and 6, later identified as her nieces, were seated in the rear of the car.

A DUI investigation ensued and VanDyke was eventually taken into custody. Troopers say a routine computer check revealed she was wanted on two outstanding capiases from New Castle County Courts and that her driver's license was currently suspended. She was also unable to provide any proof of insurance, according to police.
 
VanDyke was transported back to Troop 6 for processing. The children were transported back to the Troop in another patrol car. 
 
Once at the Troop, the children were placed in the care of the desk officer while the girls' parents responded to the barracks. Police say the girls had a toy bag with them and were playing while waiting for mom and dad. According to police, the desk officer noticed a clear plastic baggie amongst the toys in the bag.  The officer inspected the baggie and found that it contained more than 30 grams of suspected marijuana. Investigators say they learned that VanDyke stuffed the baggie of suspected marijuana in the toy bag prior to her arrest. 

After what police call a "sobering period," VanDyke was released on $3,000 unsecured bond.

Continue reading "DUI suspect Accused of Stuffing Pot in Kids' Toy Bag" »

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June 01, 2010
  'Sandlot' Star Cops Plea in DUI Case
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.tmz.com/2010/06/01/sandlot-star-cops-plea-in-dui-case-drunk-driving-marley-shelton-speed-exhibition/

Marley Shelton will have her DUI charges dismissed -- the result of a plea deal last Friday.

Shelton was arrested in Hollywood in April, after failing a DUI field sobriety test.

Shelton, who played Wendy the lifeguard in "The Sandlot" -- will plead no contest to speed exhibition ... and the 2 DUI charges will be dismissed.  Shelton will be fined $240 plus penalties.  She will be placed on 24 months informal probation -- this according to her DUI lawyer.

A judge will take the plea on June 21.

Continue reading "'Sandlot' Star Cops Plea in DUI Case" »

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June 01, 2010
  DUI Arrests Up, Fatalities Down During CHP Maximum Enforcement
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.ktvu.com/news/23747409/detail.html

OAKLAND, Calif. -- Fatalities are down and DUI arrests are up both statewide and in the Bay Area so far during the California Highway Patrol's maximum DUI enforcement period Memorial Day weekend.

 

CHP officers have arrested 203 drivers allegedly DUI between 6 p.m. Friday and 6 a.m. today in the Bay Area, up from last year's regional count of 193 drivers during that same time, according to CHP Sgt. Trent Cross.

 

Statewide, CHP officers have arrested 1,406 allegedly drunken drivers, an increase from the 1,296 drivers arrested this time last year, Cross said.

 

One fatality has been reported in the Bay Area's CHP jurisdiction during the holiday weekend, which occurred in Antioch. Last year there were five fatalities between Friday night and Monday morning, according to Cross.

 

The maximum DUI enforcement period lasts until midnight.

Continue reading "DUI Arrests Up, Fatalities Down During CHP Maximum Enforcement" »

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June 01, 2010
  Holiday traffic deaths up, DUI arrests down
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

http://www.presstelegram.com/news/ci_15200651

LOS ANGELES — Traffic deaths have risen but arrests for DUI were down in Los Angeles County this Memorial Day weekend as compared with the same period last year, California Highway Patrol officials said Monday.

According to the CHP, 10 people have been killed on the roads and the CHP in L.A. County have made 220 DUI arrests so far, as compared with just two deaths and 287 arrests by the CHP during this same 60-hour period in 2009.

Statewide, there have been 31 people killed and 1,296 DUI arrests by the CHP in 2010, as compared with 12 deaths and 1,406 DUI arrests by the CHP in this period in 2009.

The CHP compilation covers the period from 6:01 p.m. Friday, to 6 a.m. Monday. It covers deaths reported by all police agencies in the county, but the DUI arrest totals are for CHP cases only.

Continue reading "Holiday traffic deaths up, DUI arrests down" »

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June 01, 2010
  Holiday DUI arrests increase in Stanislaus County
Posted By Coffey and Coffey

DUI arrests were way up in Stanislaus County this Memorial Day weekend.

From Friday through Sunday, 43 drivers were arrested for DUI involving alcohol or drugs, compared with 27 DUI arrests on the same days last year.

Law enforcement agencies throughout the county conducted a DUI crackdown during the weekend.

The California Highway Patrol statewide had every available officer patrolling freeways and county roads throughout the four days of heavy holiday travel.



Read more: http://www.modbee.com/2010/05/31/1189305/holiday-dui-arrests-increase-in.html#ixzz0pcn33jBJ
Continue reading "Holiday DUI arrests increase in Stanislaus County" »

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