Manitoba police forces launch Amber Alert Facebook page
Thursday, October 4th, 2012Manitoba’s Justice Minister, police and child advocates joined to launch an Amber Alert Facebook page Thursday.
Manitoba’s Justice Minister, police and child advocates joined to launch an Amber Alert Facebook page Thursday.
North Carolina law enforcement officials say that May marks the opening of the “busiest travel periods of the year.” In addition to an increase in travel, authorities say that May is the month in which law enforcement will seek to increase awareness of the dangers of drinking and driving.
Agencies across the state will be participating in an initiative that will use resources of the North Carolina Highway Patrol, the Wildlife Resources Commission and Alcohol Law Enforcement agents to enforce North Carolina law prohibiting driving while impaired that begins this month.
The DWI law enforcement operation is called “On the Road, On the Water, Don’t Drink and Drive.” Most drivers in North Carolina are aware that agencies across the state often use saturation patrols and DWI checkpoints among other strategies seeking to uncover evidence that a driver may be impaired while on the road.
But during operation On the Road, On the Water, Don’t Drink and Drive, law enforcement agencies will conduct DWI checkpoints near recreational boating areas during the summer months, with a special focus on noted summer holiday periods. However, the summer DWI enforcement initiative does not mean that all DWI saturation patrols and DWI checkpoints will be utilized only near recreational boating areas.
North Carolina officials say that the big summer holiday periods surrounding Memorial Day, the Fourth of July and Labor Day will see special consideration. But, with Cinco de Mayo and the Kentucky Derby falling on the same weekend this year, motorists can probably expect to see North Carolina DWI law enforcement efforts cropping up all across the state.
DWI charges can result in harsh consequences for a driver, if the person accused of drunk driving is later convicted. It is important to consider speaking with an experienced Pitt County DWI defense lawyer as soon as possible after a DWI arrest to learn what legal defenses may be available in a specific set of circumstances.
Source: News & Observer, “State DWI campaign to target drivers, boaters,” May 4, 2012
Driving under the influence is one of America’s deadliest crimes. In Oregon last year, 136 people lost their lives in alcohol-impaired crashes, according to ODOT’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS). Over the 2008 Labor Day weekend alone, nine people died in crashes involving alcohol or drugs. Nationwide in 2008, nearly 12,000 people died in highway crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .08 or higher.
Selected community volunteers consumed various amounts of alcohol and were tested by police officers to demonstrate the intoxicating effects of alcohol and how these effects relate to driving. The field sobriety tests demonstrated included the horizontal gaze nystagmus eye test, the walk and turn test, and the one-leg stand test. There was also a demonstration of the effectiveness of the ignition interlock devise, which did not allow the car to start when the impaired participants attempted to blow into the devise.
According to FARS, the Labor Day holiday period is historically the second deadliest on Oregon roads of all the holiday periods throughout the year. Last year’s deadly crashes in Oregon
occurred on roadways in nearly every corner of the state including Clackamas, Multnomah, Washington, Coos, Grant, Harney and Yamhill counties. Lane County Sheriff Russ Burger, who was also in attendance, shared with MADD that Lane County currently holds half of the statewide totals to date, of all fatal traffic crashes and of those, half are caused by impaired driving. Statewide, alcohol impaired crashes account for about 34% off all fatal traffic crashes.
“Make no mistake. Our message is simple and to the point. No matter what you drive — a passenger car, pickup, sport utility vehicle or motorcycle — if you get caught driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, you will be arrested,” said Chuck Hayes, chair of the Governor’s Advisory Committee on DUII and retired director of the Oregon State Police Patrol Services Division. “Driving under the influence is just not acceptable.” Last year during the Labor Day holiday period, August 29 – September 1, Oregon State Police troopers reported 87 DUII arrests. This was an increase from the 2007 and 2006 Labor Day holiday weekends when OSP troopers arrested 78 intoxicated drivers each year.