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Tuesday, 16 January 2007 |
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After a 2006 St. Louis Rams Football game this fall an Illnois Circuit Judge refused field test, a blood test and threw away a beer can after an accident with injuries. The police indicated that the Judge who had his chief judge as a passenger had a strong odor of alcohol, slurred speech and red and glassy eyes. Why would a judge do this? Judges know that field tests are a farce and blood tests are not accurate. Judges also know that a DUI without field tests and blood tests are hard to prove because the 0.08 limit is so ridiculously low that impairment is not detectable in the absence of blood tests presumption of impairment. What should you do if you are pulled over for a DUI? Only the Judge knows!
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Monday, 15 January 2007 |
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A MADD spokesperson announced their intention of seeking to
increased penalties for DUI offenders making a 2nd conviction in 5
years for DUI a felony and a third lifetime DUI conviction a felony as
well in the 2007 Georgia legislative session. Again our freedoms are
never more in jeopardy than when the legislature is in session. Given
the current state of the law, a person can receive multiple DUIs in a
single occurence if there are minors in the car as the Supreme Court
has held that the offenses don’t merge into a single occurence or
transaction. This means potentially instant felonies for first time DUI
offenders. Further, given that some people can blow over the legal
limit with less than two twelve ounce beers and not be impaired in the
slightest, this new law if passed with be a font of hardship and
tradegy. It will also be the DUI lawyers full employment act.
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Thursday, 11 January 2007 |
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The Ocean City Police Department’s in the State of Maryland is scrambling to explain why it let a drunk politician off the hook. It is waging a public relations campaign to explain to the public that field sobriety evaluations are relative and not pass/fail. This is testimony that you would never hear on the witness stand from a police officer and should provide excellent fodder for able DUI attorneys in the area.
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Thursday, 11 January 2007 |
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300 DUI Breath tests in 300 DUI prosecutions in Broward County,
Florida were thrown out of court because the Area Supervisors in
Florida calibrated the Intox breath testing machines with tap water
containing unknown chemicals instead of using laboratory certified
distilled water. The Florida Fourth District Court of Appeal upheld the
trial court judge’s ruling to exclude the breath test results in a DUI
case because the machine had been tested with tap water instead of
distilled water. Florida Administrative rules require breath test
machines be tested with distilled water. Without knowing what is in the
tap water, it can not be established that the breath test machines were
properly calibrated to be accurate. Yet another reason not to
voluntarily submit your liberty to junk science.
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Monday, 01 January 2007 |
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It is time to re-evaluate our attitudes about alcohol and other drugs
By Chip Parkhurst a guest columnist to the ocregister.com.
In purely objective terms, beverage alcohol is a recreational hard drug: mind-numbing, easy to misuse and intimately connected with aggression, carelessness, and despair. When a drugged individual is involved in a violent crime or an accident, the drug is most often alcohol. In America, alcohol is responsible for 65 percent of murders, 55 percent of college rapes (that’s 70,000 per year), 39 percent of traffic fatalities, 33 percent of all trauma injuries, 33 percent of drownings and other accidental deaths, and 25 percent of teen suicides. About 150,000 Americans die from chronic alcohol-related illnesses each year, and another 3,000 from accidental overdoses.
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Sunday, 24 December 2006 |
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Police urge, offer DUI alternatives
By MARGIE KACOHA, Daily News Staff Writer
Sunday, December 24, 2006
Drivers who get behind the wheel in Palm Beach after having too much to drink are gambling with an unpleasant encounter with the police.
But residents and guests who’ve overindulged can make the encounter much more amicable by staying off the road and calling Palm Beach police instead.
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Saturday, 11 November 2006 |
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DUI a prescription for jail time
By Debby Schamber
The Orange Leader
Driving under the influence of prescription medications has become a more common occurrence in Orange. “There has been an increase of DUI versus DWI because of an increase of people being on prescription medication,” said Sgt. L.L. Claybar of the Orange Police Department.
According to reports, shortly after 9: 30 a.m. Nov. 3, an officer was patrolling MacArthur Drive when he noticed a gold-colored vehicle pulling out of a parking lot and across several lanes of traffic. Two vehicles slammed on their brakes to avoid hitting it.
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Sunday, 29 October 2006 |
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POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: Perdue campaign manager charged with DUI
Gov. Sonny Perdue’s campaign manager, 24-year-old Nick Ayers, was arrested in Atlanta this week and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and failure to maintain his lane.
According to the the Georgia State Patrol: On Wednesday, a few minutes before 11 p.m., a trooper spotted Ayers driving a 2003 Chevrolet Tahoe down East Paces Ferry Road through light traffic at about 50 mph. He was traveling outside of his lane in a 35 mph speed zone. The trooper followed Ayers into a parking lot, where his Tahoe briefly sped up.
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Sunday, 22 October 2006 |
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Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue proclaims May 2006 DRUG AND DUI COURT MONTH
WHEREAS:
Drug and DUI courts combine judicial accountability and evidencebased
treatment to effectively intervene against substance abuse and related
crime; and WHEREAS: Results of more than 100 program evaluations and at
least three experimental studies have yielded definitive evidence that
drug and DUI Courts increase treatment retention and reduce substance
abuse and crime among drug-involved adult offenders; and WHEREAS: The
Judicial Council of Georgia has appointed a Standing Committee on Drug
Courts to encourage and support the implementation of drug courts in
all 49 judicial circuits.
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Wednesday, 13 September 2006 |
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BARTOW — A second test confirmed what Polk
County Commissioner Randy Wilkinson has been saying since Saturday: He
wasn’t drunk or on drugs when Lakeland police charged him with driving
under the influence.
So prosecutors Thursday drop-ped the DUI charge against him after a urine analysis found no drug impairment.
At a news conference Thursday afternoon, Wilkinson said the dismissal of the charge was “welcomed but expected news.”
“I knew from the very beginning that I was innocent,” he said.
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